Feminism, multiculturalism and violence against immigrant women in Canada

This thesis explores the context in which immigrant women in Canada experience violence. It will focus on the issue of why the over - all hardship they face makes them more vulnerable when they encounter violence in their lives. Immigrant women occupy a lower socio-economic level than both women...

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Main Author: Fulford , Sumie Kawakami
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3569
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-35692018-01-05T17:31:32Z Feminism, multiculturalism and violence against immigrant women in Canada Fulford , Sumie Kawakami This thesis explores the context in which immigrant women in Canada experience violence. It will focus on the issue of why the over - all hardship they face makes them more vulnerable when they encounter violence in their lives. Immigrant women occupy a lower socio-economic level than both women in general and immigrant men. They face racism, double standards, language barriers and many other obstacles to their full and equal participation in Canadian society. Despite these difficulties, their problems receive minimal attention from society. There is no coherent policy towards immigrant women and there is no theory that allows us to analyze their situation . This thesis will argue that Canadian institutions are unable to deal adequately with immigrant women's problems because governments only have either policy for immigrants or policy for women. Between these two areas of policy lies a void into which immigrant women fall . As a result immigrant women's groups are unable to get funding. Their special needs are rarely met. In conclusion, this thesis will argue that immigrant women's problems cannot be dealt with unless the Canadian body politic recognizes 'immigrant women' as a separate category. A concept such as 'immigrant women' is more than the sum of its parts. The paper will argue that there is a need to conceptualize "immigrant women" as a category in its own right . The realization that multiple identities are more than the sum of their parts may be useful in analyzing problems faced by any group of people with multiple identities. Arts, Faculty of Political Science, Department of Graduate 2009-01-12T21:50:37Z 2009-01-12T21:50:37Z 1995 1995-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3569 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 6357375 bytes application/pdf
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description This thesis explores the context in which immigrant women in Canada experience violence. It will focus on the issue of why the over - all hardship they face makes them more vulnerable when they encounter violence in their lives. Immigrant women occupy a lower socio-economic level than both women in general and immigrant men. They face racism, double standards, language barriers and many other obstacles to their full and equal participation in Canadian society. Despite these difficulties, their problems receive minimal attention from society. There is no coherent policy towards immigrant women and there is no theory that allows us to analyze their situation . This thesis will argue that Canadian institutions are unable to deal adequately with immigrant women's problems because governments only have either policy for immigrants or policy for women. Between these two areas of policy lies a void into which immigrant women fall . As a result immigrant women's groups are unable to get funding. Their special needs are rarely met. In conclusion, this thesis will argue that immigrant women's problems cannot be dealt with unless the Canadian body politic recognizes 'immigrant women' as a separate category. A concept such as 'immigrant women' is more than the sum of its parts. The paper will argue that there is a need to conceptualize "immigrant women" as a category in its own right . The realization that multiple identities are more than the sum of their parts may be useful in analyzing problems faced by any group of people with multiple identities. === Arts, Faculty of === Political Science, Department of === Graduate
author Fulford , Sumie Kawakami
spellingShingle Fulford , Sumie Kawakami
Feminism, multiculturalism and violence against immigrant women in Canada
author_facet Fulford , Sumie Kawakami
author_sort Fulford , Sumie Kawakami
title Feminism, multiculturalism and violence against immigrant women in Canada
title_short Feminism, multiculturalism and violence against immigrant women in Canada
title_full Feminism, multiculturalism and violence against immigrant women in Canada
title_fullStr Feminism, multiculturalism and violence against immigrant women in Canada
title_full_unstemmed Feminism, multiculturalism and violence against immigrant women in Canada
title_sort feminism, multiculturalism and violence against immigrant women in canada
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3569
work_keys_str_mv AT fulfordsumiekawakami feminismmulticulturalismandviolenceagainstimmigrantwomenincanada
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