|
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
|
|
WOMEN'S HEALTH & URBAN
LIFE:
AN INTERNATIONAL
AND INTERDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL (1)
(Vol.5, Issue
2, Dec. 2006)
SPECIAL ISSUE: THE HEALTH OF GIRLS
& YOUNG WOMEN
SPECIAL ISSUE EDITOR: VAPPU
TYYSKÄ
CONTENTS
Special Issue Editor’s Introduction (download
pdf)
VAPPU TYYSKÄ (Ryerson University)
The Broken Mirror: Young Women, Beauty & Facial Difference (download
pdf)
FIONA WHITTINGTON-WALSH (York University)
Aggressive Girls’ Health & Parent-Daughter Conflict (download
pdf)
DEBRA J. PEPLER (York University)
JANICE WADDELL (Ryerson University)
DEPENG JIANG (York University)
WENDY CRAIG (Queen’s University)
JENNIFER CONNOLLY (York University)
JENNIFER LAMB (York University)
From Mothers to Daughters: A Qualitative Examination of the Reproductive
Health Seeking Behaviour of African American Women (download
pdf)
LARI WARREN-JEANPIERE (Wayne State University,
USA)
Perceptions of Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) Among Young Canadian Women (download
pdf)
MICHELLE COGHLAN (Centre for Research in
Women’s Health, Toronto)
ILENE HYMAN (University of Toronto)
ROBIN MASON (University of Toronto and Centre for
Research in Women’s Health, Toronto)
The Authors Of The Current Issue:
Michelle Coghlan is a doctoral student in the Department of Sociology,
University of Victoria, Canada. She was a Research Assistant on this
study exploring perceptions of and responses to intimate partner violence
among young Canadian-born and immigrant women.
Jennifer Connolly (Ph.D.) is a Professor of Clinical-Developmental Psychology
at York University and is also the Director of the LaMarsh Centre for
Research on Violence and Conflict Resolution. Her research examines social
development in adolescence and especially romantic development. She also
studies dating violence and youth at risk. Current research examines
media influences on dating violence, cross-national study of dating violence
in Italy and Canada, relationship dissolution and dating violence and
evaluation of a high school dating violence prevention program.
Wendy Craig (Ph.D.) is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology
at Queen’s University. Her research examines the risk and protective
factors associated with bullying and victimization in family, peer, individual,
school and social relationships. She also works on aggression in females
in romantic relationships, dating violence and young girls with behaviour
problems. She recently won an Investigator Award from the Canadian Institute
of Health Research. She has published widely in the areas of bullying
and victimization, peer processes, sexual harassment and aggression in
girls and edited and coauthored books as well as numerous book chapters
and articles, including a Report for the World Health Organization.
Ilene Hyman (Ph.D.) is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Public
Health Sciences at the University of Toronto and a Research Associate
at the Joint Centre of Excellence for Research on Immigration and Settlement.
Her expertise is in the areas of immigration and health, women’s
health and cross-cultural issues in
health care. She has most recently been involved in several research
studies examining intimate partner violence in newcomer communities including
studies of prevalence, risk factors and help-seeking behaviour.
Depeng Jiang (Ph.D.) is a Research Associate at York University and statistical
consultant at the Toronto Child Development Institute. His research interests
include data analyses and statistical issues in behaviour science and
quantitative methodology and experiment design.
Jennifer Lamb is a research assistant with the Canadian Initiative for
the Prevention of Bullying and the LaMarsh Centre for Research on Violence
and Conflict Resolution. She is currently a medical student at the University
of Toronto.
Robin Mason (Ph.D.) is a Research Scientist at the Centre for Research
in Women’s Health and an Assistant Professor in the Department
of Public Health Sciences at the University of Toronto. Her expertise
is in community based participatory research and the health effects of
intimate partner violence (IPV), the experience of IPV in minority cultural
communities and how to effectively train and educate health care professionals
to these issues. She was a Principal Investigator on this study exploring
perceptions of and responses to intimate partner violence among young
women.
Debra Pepler (Ph.D.) is Professor of Psychology at York University, a
Senior Associate Scientist at the Hospital for Sick Children and holds
a Senior Research Fellowship from the Ontario Mental Health Foundation.
She co-leads the Canadian Initiative for the Prevention of Bullying,
funded by the National Crime Prevention Strategy. She edited a recent
book on international bullying prevention programs and has consulted
with the OECD on school violence. Her clinical work
is in the area of children’s aggression and children in families
at risk. She works on the Earlscourt Girls Connection for aggressive
girls and their families and Breaking the Cycle for substance using women
and their young children. She holds several research grants.
Vappu Tyyskä (Ph.D.) is Associate Professor in the Department of
Sociology at Ryerson University. Her research and publication are in
the area of gender relations, sociology of youth and intergenerational
relations, including those in immigrant communities. She has conducted
research on youth-parent relations in the Iranian and Sri Lankan Tamil
communities in Toronto. She has participated in
team research on the needs of newcomer immigrant children. She is currently
starting a research project on family violence in selected immigrant
communities and a team research project on immigrant women’s English
language acquisition and proficiency. the CIHR NET Grant project entitled ‘Preventing
Violence in the Lives of Girls and Women’.
Janice Waddell (Ph.D.) is Associate Professor at Ryerson University,
Associate Director of the School of Nursing, Co-Investigator of the Ryerson
University, Faculty of Community Services, Nursing Centre for Research
and Education on Violence Against Women and Children and a Senior Associate
with Donner & Wheeler Career Planning and Development Consultants.
Her clinical practice expertise is in the areas of adolescent and child
mental health. Clinical practice research activity focuses on Aggressive
Girls’ Health. She is a
Collaborator with the CIHR NET Grant project entitled ‘Preventing
Violence in the Lives of Girls and Women’.
Lari Warren-Jeanpiere (Ph.D.) is a medical sociologist whose research
interests include African American mother/daughter communication, women’s
health and race, class and gender. She is a Research Associate in the
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences at the Wayne State
University School of Medicine
where she conducts health disparity research.
Fiona Whittington-Walsh is a doctoral candidate in Sociology at York
University and teaches at Ryerson University’s Department of Sociology.
She works on community-academic research partnerships as well as everyday
experiences of women and young girls with facial/physical differences.
Her current research is examining cosmetic surgery and the production
of beauty consumption.
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.
|