Taking Stands

Gender and the Sustainability of Rural Communities

By Maureen G. Reed
Categories: Environmental & Nature Studies, Environmental Protection & Preservation, Business, Economics & Industry, Natural Resources, Gender & Sexuality Studies, Women’s Studies, Geography, Geography, Agriculture & Food Production, Regional & Cultural Studies, Canadian Studies
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774810173, 296 pages, May 2003
Paperback : 9780774810180, 296 pages, January 2004
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774850568, 296 pages, November 2007

Table of contents

Preface

Acknowledgments

Abbreviations

1. Introduction: Seeing the Trees among Women in Forestry
Communities

2. Transition and Social Marginalization of Forestry Communities

3. Policy and Structural Change in Rural British Columbia

4. Women and Woods Work: The Gender of Forestry Jobs

5. Women’s Lives, Husbands’ Wives: "Managing"
Forestry Communities

6. Communities Confront Outsiders

7. Fitting In: Making a Place for Gender in Environmental and Land
Use Planning

8. Social Sustainability and the Renewal of Research Agendas

Epilogue

Appendix: Describing and Reflecting on Research Methods

Notes

References I

ndex

A powerful and challenging book, Taking Stands provides a crucial understanding of community change in resource-dependent regions, tackling the complexities of gender and activism.

Description

This book goes beyond the dichotomies of “pro” and “anti” environmentalism to tell the stories of the women who seek to maintain resource use in rural places. The author links the experiences of women who seek to protect forestry as an industry, a livelihood, a community, and a culture to policy making by considering the effects of environmental policy changes on the social dynamics of workplaces, households, and communities in forestry towns of British Columbia’s temperate rainforest. Taking Stands provides a crucial understanding of community change in resource-dependent regions and helps us to better tackle the complexities of gender and activism as they relate to rural sustainability.

Reviews

An excellent handling of a complex and highly controversial topic ... It will make its mark on the world stage, inform feminist and environmental activism and theory, and help Canadians make sense of our poorly understood and badly maligned forestry sector.

- Karen Krug

Maureen Reed has created a significant and sophisticated study that will establish a benchmark not only in how we understand and engage with community change and debate in resource-dependent regions, but also in how we conceptualize gender, women, and activism in those debates.

- Greg Halseth, Canada Research Chair in Rural and Small Town Studies, Geography, University of Northern British Columbia