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  • Spring 2014

    Dempsey, Dianna M

    in our understanding of ESE exist. The purpose of the first study was to investigate whether the four major factors known to contribute to self-efficacy can help account for observed gender differences in ESE. I find that the significantly lower ESE of women studied can be attributed to their lower

    of entrepreneurial intentionality: incubating entrepreneur, imminent entrepreneur, employed stayer, and employed leaver. My analysis shows that combining EI and SI into profiles offers important insights into the effects of gender and ESE on career intentionality to become an entrepreneur that are

  • Spring 2012

    Hall, Nathan D

    participants varied in gender, age, years of teaching experience, grade(s) presently taught, and gender of students taught. Each physical education teacher who participated in the study completed a one-on-one semi-structured interview, as well as, a short demographic questionnaire. Following data collection

  • Spring 2013

    Reyes Uribe, Ana C.

    functionality of the place; (4) gender inequality and gender roles affect women’s motivation for their leisure engagement; and, (5) traditional ways of conceptualizing the need for relatedness and the need for competence need to be re-considered. Overall, the conceptual framework proposed was useful for

  • 2012-02-15

    Johnson, Joy - Scientific Director, CIHR Institute of Gender and Health, King, Malcolm - Scientific Director, CIHR Institute of Aborignal Peoples Health

    This PowerPoint and video give a introduction to the Canadian Institutes of Health Research –Institute of Gender and Health (CIHR-IGH). IGH Scientific Director Dr. Joy Johnson provide an overview of the work of the Institute and its unique opportunities for research funding, knowledge translation

  • 09/28/2021

    Oriola, Temitope B

    , gender, and LGBTQIA2S+ status? What are the factors influencing advocacy for or against the SRO program among parents, school administrators, board trustees and social activists? What are the implications of the findings from the questions above for educational and policing policy? The research draws on

    intersectionality and risk society theories to investigate the SRO phenomenon in Canada. It explores the role and intersection of race, gender, and sexuality in discourses about and experiences with SRO programs. This study will investigate the bureaucratic underpinnings of and policy directions regarding SRO

  • Spring 2019

    Karimi, Ahmad

    seek asylum with United Nations’ (UN) offices located in Turkey. Currently, a majority of those who seek asylum based on their sexual orientation or gender identities (SOGI) are resettled to the United States and Canada. Yet, despite the groundbreaking legal actions in support of lesbian, gay, bisexual

    of racialized sexual minorities, in Canada. The central question in this study is: how do sexuality, race, gender, class, and ethnicity as well as their interactions, regulate racialized sexual minority refugees’ belonging to various social groups and their access to rights such as housing, education

    ’ interactions in Canada at the intersection of race-ethnicity, gender and sexuality, and nationality. In chapter 4, I argue that overreliance on refugees’ deployment of social capital for integration has grave shortcomings for refugees’ senses of belonging. I draw on Bourdieu’s writings on social capital to

  • 2010

    Wells, Kristopher

    or attempted suicide of a close friend or family member. In addition to these more general risk factors, sexual-minority youth also face additional distinctive risk factors such as a lack of family acceptance, age at which they come out, gender atypicality, and bullying or conflict because of their

    perceived sexual orientation or gender identity. On average, sexual minority youth are two to three times more likely to attempt suicide than their heterosexual peers.

  • Fall 2013

    Cwikla, Anna

    a number of frequently overlooked issues including the unspecified identity of Mary in the Dialogue of the Saviour and the gender construction in the socio-historical context of the Dialogue of the Saviour.

  • 2007

    Wells, Kristopher

    Homophobic bullying is defined as bullying behaviours that are motivated by prejudice against a person’s actual or perceived sexual orientation or gender. You don’t have to be a sexual minority to identity. You don’t have to be a sexual minority to become a target. For example, while using comments

    like “that’s so gay” may seem innocent, they still contribute to the development of a negative or hostile environment towards sexual minorities. They also serve as a way to keep people in their “gender boxes” by reinforcing stereotypes of what it means to be male or female. Too often homophobia becomes

  • 2015

    Broyles, Stephanie, Heymsfield, Steven B., Prado, Carla M., Katzmarzyk, Peter T., Wells, Jonathan C. K., Mire, Emily, Siervo, Mario

    Fat mass (FM) and fat-free mass (FFM) are frequently measured to define body composition phenotypes. The load–capacity model integrates the effects of both FM and FFM to improve disease-risk prediction. We aimed to derive age-, gender- and BMI-specific reference curves of load–capacity model

    ASM (kg). Age-standardised reference curves, stratified by gender and BMI (<25·0 kg/m2, 25·0–29·9 kg/m2, ≥30·0 kg/m2), were constructed using an LMS approach. Percentiles of the reference curves were 5th, 15th, 25th, 50th, 75th, 85th and 95th. Secondary analysis of data from the 1999–2004 National

    Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). The population included 6580 females and 6656 males. The unweighted proportions of obesity in males and females were 25·5 % and 34·7 %, respectively. The average values of both FM:FFM and TrFM:ASM were greater in female and obese subjects. Gender and BMI

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