
Negotiating the fluid boundaries of state, community, industry, and household, and drawing on a wide range of primary sources, Jennifer Stephen illustrates how women's relationships to home, work, and nation were profoundly altered during this period. She demonstrates how federal officials enlisted the help of a new generation of 'experts' to entrench a two-tiered training and employment system that would become an enduring feature of the Canadian state.
This engaging study not only intervenes in debates about the gendered origins of Canada's welfare state, it also makes an important contribution to Canadian social history, labour and gender studies, sociology, and political science.
| m t ansari courtney m townsend mark gottfredson | morris mano m patterson jame adams cr |