Women, citizenship and Canadian child care policy in the 1990s
by Vappu Tyyskä, PhD.
Occasional paper 13,
Childcare Resource and Research Unit, March 2001.
Developments in Canadian child day care policy in the 1990s at the federal,
provincial (Ontario) and municipal (Toronto and Peel) levels highlight
the problems associated with the male model of citizenship. The political
climate poses a particular threat to the social citizenship rights of
women and members of lower socio-economic groups. Likewise, political
citizenship is negatively affected, as most women's and advocacy organizations
are dismissed by governments as "special interest groups". Based
on their outsider status in official politics, and lacking stable alliances,
these organizations are drawn toward political solutions that may prove
palatable to governments in the short run but may undermine general claims
for child care as a universal rather than a targeted service.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Women's social rights
Women, federalism and dependency discourse
Federalism and child care policy
Women, federalism and political citizenship
Child care in the province of Ontario
Municipal problems: City of Toronto and
Region of Peel
Conclusions
End notes
Bibliography
About the Author / Acknowledgments
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