2002
DOI: 10.1007/s12108-002-1031-1
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The Canadian case: Cornucopia of neglected research opportunities

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Cited by 11 publications
(12 citation statements)
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References 155 publications
(57 reference statements)
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“…Ogmundson (2002) also notes that as a result of the more generous welfare system, the Canadian working class is able to enjoy greater income security and access to public services when compared with the United States (see also Zuberi 2006). Moreover, as social welfare policy is particularly important for moderating the effects of poor living conditions (Kenworthy 2011), these patterns may affect a nation's educational outcomes in meaningful ways.…”
Section: Culture Policy and Institutionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ogmundson (2002) also notes that as a result of the more generous welfare system, the Canadian working class is able to enjoy greater income security and access to public services when compared with the United States (see also Zuberi 2006). Moreover, as social welfare policy is particularly important for moderating the effects of poor living conditions (Kenworthy 2011), these patterns may affect a nation's educational outcomes in meaningful ways.…”
Section: Culture Policy and Institutionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a consequence of this history, Anglo-Canadian universities have always had a British flavor to them, something that can be seen in terms of faculty hiring, university governance, and culture as well as the intellectual orientation of Canadian institutions of higher education. In Quebec, in contrast, one can see, especially after the 1960s, a strong French orientation, as Quebec nationalists looked to European intellectual culture as a counter-weight to the English speaking hegemony of both American and Anglo-Canadian universities (Brym, 2002;Cormier, 2002Cormier, , 2004bEichler, 2002;Fournier, 2002;Helmes-Hayes, 2002;Ogmundson, 2002;Smith, 2002;Nock, 2002).…”
Section: The Romance Of European Ideas: Finding the Right Balancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…As we discussed above, the Canadian sociology association has serious problems (Brym, 2002). And as Richard Ogmundson has argued, there is much unfulfilled potential for an empirical oriented non-Marxist sociology in Canada (Ogmundson, 2002). Cormier's excellent historical work on the social sciences in Canada relies on interviews with the "founding" generation of Canadian sociology, a cohort of scholars rightly proud of their accomplishments establishing the discipline in Canada.…”
Section: The Romance Of European Ideas: Finding the Right Balancementioning
confidence: 99%
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