JQR360H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Visible Minority, Occupational Segregation
Document Summary
The (cid:449)a(cid:455)s i(cid:374) (cid:449)hi(cid:272)h (cid:449)ork is ge(cid:374)dered a(cid:374)d ge(cid:374)der, faith, a(cid:374)d (cid:449)ork i(cid:374)terse(cid:272)t i(cid:374) (cid:374)u(cid:374)s" e(cid:454)perie(cid:374)(cid:272)e o(cid:448)er time, and how we see that through the canadian census. The(cid:455) (cid:449)ere(cid:374)"t (cid:272)ou(cid:374)ted properl(cid:455) i(cid:374) the (cid:272)e(cid:374)sus (cid:449)hi(cid:272)h led to u(cid:374)der(cid:272)ou(cid:374)ti(cid:374)g a(cid:374)d flu(cid:272)tuatio(cid:374)s i(cid:374) their numbers over the course of census taking. Political motivations impact how we count these women. Enumeration was variable, often depending on the individual enumerator (their familiarity with religious work) and how it was aggregated by officials. Some would enumerate them based off their faith (pushed them out of work force). Others would put them in the profession they were working in (teachers, nurses, administrators, etc. ) Enumerators (local level) would give the census to the intermediaries who would then change around numbers based on what they wanted. Devalued/ignored their impact of social and economic aspects of canadian life in many regions even though they had profound impact on many communities.