Women's Organizing and Public Policy in Canada and Sweden

By Linda Briskin & Mona Eliasson
Categories: Gender & Sexuality Studies
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773518551, 408 pages, October 1999
Paperback : 9780773518919, 408 pages, February 2000
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773567894, 408 pages, October 1999

Description

Women's Organizing and Public Policy in Canada and Sweden highlights the impact of women's organizing on the framing and implementing of public policy, the reconstituting of discourse, and the practices of unions, political parties, and the state. It examines the strategies women have used to organize themselves as a vocal and politicized constituency. In so doing, it stretches definitions of organizing and of political practice, politicizes the social and the private, and expands conceptions of agency. Comparing Sweden and Canada allows the mechanisms at work in each society to emerge more clearly, challenging what is often taken for granted. Contributors include Christina Bergqvist (Uppsala, Sweden), Linda Briskin, Barbara Cameron (York, Canada), Marianne Carlsson (Uppsala, Sweden), Rebecca Priegert Coulter (University of Western Ontario, Canada), Mona Eliasson, Georgina Feldberg (York, Canada), Sue Findlay (private scholar, Canada), Lena Gonäs (National Institute for Working Life, Sweden), Wuokko Knocke (National Institute for Working Life, Sweden), Catharina Landström (Linkoping, Sweden), Colleen Lundy (Carleton, Canada), Rianne Mahon (Carleton, Canada), Chantal Maillé (Concordia, Canada), Roxana Ng (Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, Canada), Becki Ross (University of British Columbia, Canada), Lena Wängnerud (Göteborg, Sweden), and Inga Wernersson (Göteborg, Sweden).

Reviews

"an ambitious collection ... its strength lies in the comparative scope of the analysis. In bringing together women from Canada and Sweden to collaborate around different themes, [Women's Organizing and Public Policy in Canada and Sweden] lives up to the promise suggested in its preface." Christina Gabriel, Department of Political Science, University of Alberta.