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Palgrave Macmillan
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The Palgrave Handbook of Gender, Sexuality, and Canadian Politics

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  • © 2020

Overview

  • Re-analyzes existing scholarship in Canadian Politics through the prism of gender

  • Provides a deeper understanding of societal foundations and dynamics of social power involved in the unfolding of Canadian politics

  • Brings together leading scholars and voices in Canadian Politics to remap the field of scholarship through the lens of gender and intersectional politics

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Table of contents (26 chapters)

  1. The Civil Society

Keywords

About this book

The Palgrave Handbook of Gender, Sexuality, and Canadian Politics offers the first and only handbook in the field of Canadian politics that uses 'gender' (which it interprets broadly, as inclusive of sex, sexualities, and other intersecting identities) as its category of analysis. Its premise is that political actors’ identities frame how Canadian politics is thought, told, and done; in turn, Canadian politics, as a set of ideas, state institutions and decision-making processes, and civil society mobilizations, does and redoes gender. Following the standard structure of mainstream introductory Canadian politics textbooks, this handbook is divided into four sections (ideologies, institutions, civil society, and public policy) each of which contains several chapters on topics commonly taught in Canadian politics classes. The originality of the handbook lies in its approach: each chapter reviews the basics of a given topic from the perspective of gendered/sexualized and other intersectional identities. Such an approach makes the handbook the only one of its kind in Canadian Politics.


Editors and Affiliations

  • School of Political Studies, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada

    Manon Tremblay

  • Department of History & Politics, University of New Brunswick, Saint John, Canada

    Joanna Everitt

About the editors

Manon Tremblay is Professor in the School of Political Studies at the University of Ottawa, Canada. She is the author of 100 Questions about Women and Politics, and editor of Queering Representation: LGBTQ People and Electoral Politics in Canada along with other works on women, lesbian and gay activism, and politics.

Joanna Everitt is Professor of Political Science at the University of New Brunswick in Saint John, Canada, specializing in Canadian politics with a focus on gender and identity in political engagement, public opinion, and political communication. She has also been involved in federal and provincial election studies. 



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