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Vol 1, Issue 1, 2002
Vol 1, Issue 2, 2002
Vol 2, Issue 1, 2003
Vol 2, Issue 2, 2003
Vol 3, Issue 1, 2004
Vol 3, Issue 2, 2004
Vol 4, Issue 1, 2005
Vol 4, Issue 2, 2005
Vol 5, Issue 1, 2006
Vol
5, Issue 2, 2006
Vol
6, Issue 1, 2007
Vol
6, Issue 2, 2007
Vol
7, Issue 1, 2008
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WOMEN'S HEALTH & URBAN
LIFE:
AN INTERNATIONAL
AND INTERDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL (1)
(Vol. 3, Issue
2, December 2004)
CONTENTS:
General Editor’s Introduction (download full
text pdf file)
AYSAN SEV’ER (University of Toronto)
HIV/AIDS Risk Behaviours of Young Females in Botswana (download full
text pdf file)
VIJAYA KRISHNAN (Grande Prairie College)
Shifting the Lens: Resituating Women’s Self-Esteem From the Personal
to the Political (download full
text pdf file)
CHERYL van DAALEN (York University)
Food Habit Changes in a Group of Immigrant Iranian Women in Uppsala (download full text pdf file)
TAHIRE O. KOÇTÜRK (Family Medicine Stockholm, Sweden)
Research Note:
Gendering HIV/AIDS Prevention: Situating Canadian Youth in a Transitional
World ( download full
text pdf file)
JUNE LARKIN (University of Toronto)
CLAUDIA MITCHELL (Natal University, South Africa)
The Authors Of The Current Issue:
Vijaya Krishnan (Ph.D.) is a demographer whose research interests
include population health, research methods, and HIV/AIDS. At the time
of writing, she was a lecturer at University of Botswana. She is now
affiliated with the Grande Prairie Regional College. Her recent
publications include: “Sexual risk behaviors and HIV/AIDS and STD
risk
perceptions of young people in Botswana” (monograph, University
of
Botswana, 2003); “The prevalence of child sexual abuse in Canadian
Aboriginal communities” Child Suffering in the World (Sexual Trauma
Center, 2000); “Impact of abortion on Canadian fertility rates” (with
Karol
J. Krotki), Canadian Studies in Population (1999).
Tahire O. Koçtürk is a physician and a nutritionist educated
at the
Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey, The University of Tennessee and
the Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden. Amongst her long list of
credentials is an innovative analysis of the experiences of Turkish women
immigrants (A Matter of Honour, London, Zed Books). Her more recent
works focus on food habit changes of immigrant women from middle eastern
and African origins.
June Larkin (Ph.D.) is undergraduate coordinator of Women’s Studies
and director of Equity Studies, University of Toronto, St. George campus.
She is coordinator of the Gendering Adolescent AIDS Prevention (GAAP)
project housed at the Institute for Women’s Studies and
Gender Studies, University of Toronto.
Claudia Mitchell (Ph.D.) is a professor in the School of Education at
the University of Natal, South Africa. She has published extensively
in the
area of literacy, girls’ education, visual participatory methodologies
and
gender and HIV/AIDS. She is coordinator of the Gendering Adolescent AIDS
Prevention (GAAP) project.
Aysan Sev’er (Ph.D.) is a professor of Sociology at the University
of
Toronto. She teaches sociology of gender and family and writes
extensively on sexual harassment, intimate partner abuse of women, link
between separation and violence, cross-cultural forms of wife abuse and
extreme violence against women such as “honour killings” and “dowry
murders.” Her latest book on women who have left their abusive
partners
(Fleeing the House of Horrors, University of Toronto Press) has received
the Canadian Women’s Studies Book Award (2004). She is also the
founder and the general editor of Women’s Health & Urban Life
journal.
Cheryl van Daalen (R.N., Ph.D.) is a feminist mental health nurse
and faculty member with York University School of Nursing in Toronto.
Her areas of interest and scholarship include women’s self- esteem,
young
women and anger, girl’s experiences with shame in physical education,
children’s rights in health care, homelessness, feminist nursing
practice,
feminist pedagogy, eco-therapy, and the relationship between oppression
and mental health. She is currently a volunteer street nurse in Toronto,
has
a private pro bono community health nurse practice and is a special
advisor on children’s mental health with the Canadian Coalition
for the
Rights of Children.
1. The Women's Health & Urban
Life: An International and Interdisciplinary Journal is generously
funded by the Wellesley Central Health Corporation and is permanently
housed at the Sociology Department, University of Toronto. The founder
and the first general editor is Aysan Sev'er, University of Toronto.
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