Sharing rural research, connecting rural research stakeholders
Partager la recherche rurale et mettre en réseau ses partenaires

Showing posts with label Gender. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gender. Show all posts

Reports/Rapports : Determining Needs of Southern Alberta Rural Communities for Improved Sexual Assault Services

Source: Mount Royal University.
Funded by the Alberta Rural Development Network, this project sought to identify educational and resource needs of professionals in rural and Aboriginal communities that would assist them in either keeping female sexual assault victims in their communities and providing care, or to be able to better assist these women when they return to their communities.

If comprehensive, sensitive services are not provided after a sexual assault, women face exceptionally high risks of mental illness, substance abuse, job losses and chronic health problems, and resulting high health care utilization.

Researchers administered an online survey and performed three focus group interviews at a medium-sized and a small rural hospital and at an Aboriginal health centre.

Link to plain language summary

Link to report.

WWW: www.ardn.ca

(E-)Books/Livres(-E) : Rural Women's Health

Source: University of Toronto Press.
Rural Women’s Health integrates perspectives from rural practitioners, residents, and scholars in a variety of fields, including nursing, sociology, anthropology, and geography, to tackle issues relevant to diverse settings across the country. As such, it presents a national perspective on the nature of women’s health while respecting internal and regional diversity, as well as viewpoints from international scholarship.

The well-being of rural communities affects the well-being of those who reside in towns and cities because of rural-urban connections through food, drinking water, infectious disease, extreme environmental events, recreation, and for many, retirement residence. In rural areas themselves, women play a critical role in the health of their families and communities, yet women’s health is often marginalized or ignored. There have been limited studies to date about rural women and health in Canada. Filling an important gap in scholarship, this collection identifies priority issues that must be addressed to ensure these women’s well-being and offers innovative theoretical and methodological ideas for improvement.

Edited by Beverly D. Leipert, Belinda Leach, and Wilfreda E. Thurston. Rural Women's Health. University of Toronto Press.

E-Book

WWW: www.utppublishing.com

Events/Événements : The empowerment of rural women, Commission on the Status of Women

Source: UN Women.
The fifty-sixth session of the Commission on the Status of Women will take place at United Nations Headquarters in New York from Monday, 27 February to Friday, 9 March 2012. Priority theme: The empowerment of rural women and their role in poverty and hunger eradication, development and current challenges.

Summary of Secretary-General’s report E/CN.6/2012/3
"The report provides an overview of the situation of women and girls in rural areas, examines the global context and points out how advancing rural women’s and girls’ empowerment contributes to rural development and food security. It discusses rural women’s access to resources (land, finance, extension, information and technology) and markets, employment and decent work, and social protection. It discusses their contribution to unpaid care work, how service provision can reduce the burden of such work, and their role in sustainable development. The report concludes with a set of recommendations for consideration by the Commission on the Status of Women."

Full report.

Organization of the session


WWW: www.unwomen.org

Funding/Financement : Women Living in Rural and Remote Communities / Femmes vivant dans les collectivités rurales et éloignées

Le texte en français suit l’anglais.
Source: Status of Women Canada / Condition féminine Canada.
Status of Women Canada is launching a Call for Proposals to solicit funding applications for projects that promote equality and support the advancement of women and girls living in rural and remote communities and small urban centres.

Projects under this Call for Proposals fall under one of two thematic areas:

1. Community planning to reduce violence against women and girls in rural communities and small urban centres in Canada.

2. Community planning for women’s economic security in rural and remote communities in Canada.

If your organization has solid roots in the community, works effectively with partners and wants to achieve concrete results for local women and girls, this opportunity may be right for you.

The deadline for application to this Call for Proposals is November 4th, 2011.

For more information about this Call for Proposals, please visit our website at: http://www.swc-cfc.gc.ca/fun-fin/cfp-adp/2011-1/index-eng.html or contact the Ontario office toll free at 1-866-599-7259.

Status of Women Canada reminds organizations that applications to the Women's Program are also accepted on an ongoing basis.

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Condition féminine Canada lance un appel de propositions afin de recevoir des demandes de financement pour des projets qui font la promotion de l’égalité et favorisent l’avancement des femmes et des filles dans les collectivités rurales et éloignées et les petits centres urbains.

Les projets acceptés dans le cadre de cet appel de propositions porteront sur l’un ou l’autre des thèmes suivants :

1. Planification communautaire pour réduire la violence faite aux femmes et aux filles dans les collectivités rurales et les petits centres urbains du Canada

2. Planification communautaire pour assurer la sécurité économique des femmes dans les collectivités rurales et éloignées du Canada.

Si votre organisme est solidement implanté dans son milieu, travaille efficacement avec des partenaires et veut produire des résultats concrets pour les femmes et les filles de votre région, cette possibilité pourrait être tout indiquée pour vous.

La date limite pour la réception des demandes dans le Cadre de cet appel de propositions est le 4 novembre 2011.

Pour obtenir de plus amples renseignements au sujet du présent appel de propositions, visitez notre site à l’adresse suivante : http://www.cfc-swc.gc.ca/fun-fin/cfp-adp/2011-1/index-fra.html ou communiquez avec le bureau de Condition féminine Canada sans frais au numéro de téléphone 1-866-599-7259.

Condition féminine Canada rappelle aux organismes que le Programme de promotion de la femme accepte de plus les demandes régulières de financement en tout temps.

Events/Événements : Gender, Rurality and Transformation

Source: Rural Women Making Change.
The Rural Women Making Change CURA is hosting a conference on May 13 and 14th. The Conference is entitled Gender, Rurality and Transformation. There is no registration fee. Space is limited so sign-up early.


Conference web page.


WWW: http://www.rwmc.uoguelph.ca/

Presentations/Présentations : What’s Rural got to do with it? Getting to the Heart of Migration in Canada

Le texte en français suit l’anglais.
Source: Rural Development Network (RDN) / Réseau pour le développement rural (RDR).
RDN E-Conference, March 30, 2010. Dr. Walsh, a research scientist at the Atlantic RURAL Centre made a presentation to RDN members based on her PhD research involving a longitudinal analysis of migration using taxfiler data and interviews with 45 rural Newfoundland women.

It examines how internal migration patterns have been framed in this country and challenges the use of demographic change as a marker of rural decline.

During her presentation, Dr. Walsh spoke about:

• Canadian internal migration patterns and their framing;
• the role of women in household migration decisions;
• implications for future rural research and policy, particularly that which concerns gender, health and employment.

Presentation.

For more information on the above e-conference, please contact Clément Côté, Chief Rural Development Network, clement.cote@agr.gc.ca

WWW: Rural Development Network

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« Qu’est-ce que le rural a à voir avec cela? La migration est-elle bel et bien un indicateur de l’exode rural »

Cyberconférence du RDR, 30 mars 2010. Deatra Walsh est une scientifique de l’Atlantic RURAL Centre qui étudie les questions liées aux sexes, à la santé et à l’emploi, a fait une présentation aux membres du RDR fondée sur ses recherches au doctorat qui comprenaient une analyse statistique longitudinale sur les mouvements migratoires basée sur une analyse de déclarations de revenu aux fins d’impôt et des entrevues avec 45 femmes des régions rurales de Terre-Neuve. Elle examine comment les mouvements migratoires internes ont été mis en contexte au Canada et remet en question l’utilisation du changement démographique comme indicateur de l’exode rural.

Lors de sa présentation, Mme Walsh a traité :
• des mouvements migratoires internes et leur contexte au Canada ;
• le rôle des femmes sur la décision du ménage de migrer ou non;
• des implications pour la recherche rurale à venir, plus particulièrement en ce qui a trait aux sexes, à la santé et à l’emploi.

Présentation.

Pour des informations additionnelles concernant la cyber-conf/rence, veuillez communiquer avec Clément Côté, Chef, réseau pour le développement rural, clement.cote@agr.gc.ca

WWW: Réseau pour le développement rural

Call for papers/Appel de communications : Gender, Rurality, Transformation

Source: Rural Women Making Change, University of Guelph.
Gender, Rurality, Transformation: A conference on gender relations and the changing dynamics of Canadian rural life. University of Guelph, May 13-14 2010. Guelph, Ontario, Canada.

Rural life in Canada has always been experienced at the intersections of individual and collective ingenuity and determination, of the vagaries of climate and constraints of the physical environment, and of economic and political processes often put into action far away. Contrary to a common view that rural places and the people who live there are in some sense timeless and static, they have always been – have had to be – dynamic and adaptable. And despite claims that rural places contain fewer people and are therefore far less important than urban centres, what goes on in rural regions has profound consequences for urban and rural populations in terms of their food, water, and air quality; as well as for broader national concerns around human and animal rights, land and resource use, and the environment. Ongoing societal and environmental changes continue to have profound implications for gender relations in rural areas, and gender relations themselves contribute to how change is implemented and experienced here and elsewhere. How gender relations shift and with what consequences will vary in different rural regions depending on the cultural, economic, political social and environmental factors at play and the relationship of those regions to urban centres nearby and far away.

Rural areas are as enmeshed in the global economy as anywhere else. Sometimes through its powerful presence and sometimes because it has turned away from a particular place, the effects of the global economy are experienced in diverse ways in rural places. Family farms experience serious debt crisis and large-scale farming increases. Some natural resources decline or become inaccessible, while others take on new value. Old rural manufacturing regions are eclipsed by those closer to transportation routes and previously important economic regions losing ground in the global economy reposition themselves by marketing tourism and leisure pursuits within their communities. Livelihood maintenance increasingly requires great personal mobility. Economic and political change affects a broad range of policies and rural economic development. All of these processes of change have gendered implications. They also take place in a broader national and international context where dominant discourses are produced and promulgated largely with urban places in mind, which then bump up against and in the process redefine historically produced ideas and practices of rurality.

Amidst all of this change rural social relations are being reshaped. Migrants bring their labour, and sometimes their families, to rural communities. Young people find expanded opportunities elsewhere and leave. Urbanites and retirees seek out new and at times cheaper places to raise families and experience a different lifestyle. All of these and many other transformations shift local demographics in terms of class, age, ethnicity, religion, education, and race. In a context where the sexual division of labour continues to be critical to survival, gender relations become a flashpoint for struggles over how change is negotiated, resisted, accommodated and embraced.

Developments in scholarship pertaining to gender and to rural places allow scholars to bring these issues into focus in new ways. Older theoretical constructs, such as power and empowerment, commodity production, social reproduction, division of labour, patriarchy, and labour market, are complemented by new ones like difference, diversity, representation, mobility, and identity. This conference aims to address this broad range of rural gender issues through multiple disciplinary and theoretical lenses.

We welcome abstracts for conference papers
, workshops or posters that speak to how gender relations are being transformed and are transforming rural communities. Abstracts must be no more than 150 words and should be sent to rwmc@uoguelph.ca by February 1 2010.

Source: http://www.rwmc.uoguelph.ca/

E-Book/Livre-E : Rural women, micro-enterprises and credit, October 2009

Source: IICA.
Jan Karremans, Anne Robert. Rural women, micro-enterprises and credit: how to prepare for a successful business?: a self-learning guide. "A methodology is a path of learning that teaches us to use our talents and discover our abilities, and that helps to make our dreams come true. The training methodology presented in this guide is designed to support the development of new small rural enterprises or those striving to become stronger."


Department of Sustainable Rural Development
IICA, Headquarters
San Jose, Costa Rica

Download document.

Presentation: Rural Women on the Move

Source: RWMC Library
This presentation is based on the findings of the research study "The Economic Disadvantage of Transportation for Women in Northern Ontario".

The research presentation was made by Siobhan O’Leary to service providers, community members and local government representatives in Scotland, Ontario in 2008.

Source: Rural Women Making Change

Download PDF file.

  ©2009 http://www.rural-research-network.blogspot.com

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