Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada fonds [textual record, sound recording]
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Hierarchy Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada fonds [textual record, sound recording]
Hierarchical level:FondsContext of this record:Fonds includes:1 lower level description(s)View lower level description(s) -
Finding aid (Electronic) Finding aid 33-87 is a typed and handwritten file list relating to volumes 1-45. 33-87 PDF (90: Open)
http://data2.archives.ca/pdf/pdf002/33-87_242_vols_1-45_open.pdf(Electronic) All or some of the documents described have been digitized and are available at the following address: (90: Open)
http://heritage.canadiana.ca/view/oocihm.lac_mikan_242 -
Record information Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada fonds [textual record, sound recording]
Date:1962-1970Reference:R1170-0-7-E, RG33-89Type of material:Textual material, Sound recordingsFound in:Archives / Collections and FondsItem ID number:242Date(s):1962-1970Bilingual equivalent:Place of creation:No place, unknown, or undeterminedExtent:8.8 m of textual records
134 audio reels (190 h)Language of material:EnglishAdded language of material:English, FrenchScope and content:Fonds consists of arrangements for hearings, a precis of transcripts of hearings, submissions, research files, research studies, minutes of meetings, reports, administrative files, newspaper clippings and related material. A precis of the hearings, the submissions and the unpublished studies are also available on microfilm.
Sound recordings have been described in the series entitled Sound Recordings related to the work of the Commission.Biography/Administrative history:Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada : The Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada was established under Order in Council P.C. 312, 16 February 1967, under Part I of the Inquiries Act (R.S.C., 1952, c.154) and on the recommendation of the Prime Minister. The Commission was mandated to inquire into and report upon the status of women in Canada, and to recommend what steps might be taken by the Federal Government to ensure for women equal opportunities with men in all aspects of Canadian society, having regard for the distribution of legislative powers under the constitution of Canada, particularly with reference to federal statutes, regulations and policies that concern or affect the rights and activities of women and, to inquire into and report on: (1) Laws and practices under federal jurisdiction concerning the political rights of women; (2) The present and potential role of women in the Canadian labour force, including the special problems of married women in employment and measures that might be taken under federal jurisdiction to help in meeting them; (3) Measures that might be taken under federal jurisdiction to permit the better use of the skills and education of women, including the special re-training requirements of married women who wish to re-enter professional or skilled employment; (4) Federal labour laws and regulations in their application to women; (5) Laws, practices and policies concerning the employment and promotion of women in the Federal Civil Service, by Federal Crown Corporations and by Federal Agencies; (6) Federal taxation pertaining to women; (7) Marriage and divorce; (8) The position of women under the Criminal Law; (9) Immigration and citizenship laws, policies and practices with respect to women; and such other matters in relation to the status of women in Canada as may appear to the Commissioners to be relevant. The commissioners were Florence Bayard Bird, Chairperson; Lola M. Lange, Jeanne Lapointe, Elsie Gregory MacGill, Doris Ogilvie, Jacques Henripin and Donald Gordon, Jr. Donald Gordon resigned as Commissioner on 1 November 1967 (Order in Council P.C. 2164, 21 November 1967) and was replaced by John P. Humphrey on 2 February 1968 (Order in Council P.C. 229, 2 February 1968). The secretary was Monique Bégin.
In April 1963, when Judy LaMarsh became Minister of National Health and Welfare in the Pearson Administration, she indicated to the Prime Minister the need for a public inquiry on the status of women in Canada similar to one which President Kennedy had established in the United States. Early in 1965, La Marsh wrote:
"Pearson seemed at last to be prepared to accept my advice and to set up such a commission. I had provided him with a draft of the proposed terms of reference, and a copy of the Kennedy Commission's reference and its report together with a long list of women who might serve on such a commission."
Although the subject was raised in the federal cabinet on 11 October 1965, according to LaMarsh, the Prime Minister did not respond because the press in Canada was very negative to the idea.
LaMarsh, who became Secretary of State in December 1965, claimed that she would have been unable to convince the federal government to appoint a Commission on women's rights without the assistance of Laura Sabia, then President of the Canadian Federation of University Women. On 18 April 1966, Sabia sent a letter to all established women's organizations in Canada calling for a meeting to discuss the status of women. The meeting, held in Toronto on 3 May 1966, was attended by 50 women representing 32 organizations. It led to the establishment of the Committee on the Equality of Women in Canada (CEW) under Sabia's leadership.
In a letter to Prime Minister Pearson, dated 26 September 1966, Sabia pointed out some of the results of the meeting:
"There was general agreement among thirty-two of the National Organizations representing over a million and a half women that a comprehensive inquiry into the factors which prevent women from participating fully in the economic, educational, political, social and professional life of Canada was imperative ... we submit that a Royal Commission on the Status of Women would be a first step to this important realization."
The CEW also made a submission to the Government of Canada, on 15 September, requesting a meeting with the Prime Minister about women's rights.
The objectives of the CEW were strongly promoted in the House of Commons, by Judy LaMarsh and Grace MacInnis. Also, Doris Anderson, the editor of Chatelaine, wrote an editorial in the July 1966 issue of the magazine in favor of a royal commission.
When the delegation representating the CEW went to Ottawa, on 10 November 1966, they met with the Minister of Justice, Lucien Cardin, the Secretary of State, Judy LaMarsh, and the Minister of Labour, J.R. Nicholson. The issues addressed in the CEW's submission were as follows:
"discriminatory employment laws and practices, outdated legislation on marriage, divorce and the domicile of married women, education, automation and immigration and the slowness with which Canada was ratifying the United Nations and International Labour Organization's labour conventions."
Despite these initiatives, the government was hesitant. Early in January 1967, Sabia, the head of CEW, reacted by a veiled threat of a women's march on Ottawa. In addition, Judy LaMarsh continued to exert pressure for action on women's issues within the Cabinet. Finally, on 3 February 1967, the Prime Minister announced that the Government had decided to establish a royal commission "to inquire into and report on the Status of Women in Canada and to recommend what steps might be taken by the federal government to ensure their equality with men in all aspects of Canadian society." (See Judy LaMarsh, Memoires of a Bird in a Gilded Cage, Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, Ltd., 1968, pp. 301-302; House of Commons, Debates, 29 June 1966; p. 7022; 10 November 1966, p. 9770; 10 January 1967, p. 11,587; 26 January 1967, p. 12,258; and 3 February 1967, pp. 12,613 to 12,614; Chatelaine, July 1966, and February 1967; Cerise Morris, "Determination and Thoroughness: The Movement for a Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada", Atlantis: A Women's Studies Journal/ Journal d'études sur la femme, vol. 5, no. 2, Spring, 1980, pp. 1-21 and National Archives of Canada, Lester B. Pearson Papers, MG 26, N4, vol. 151, file No. 354, Part I: Submissions).
Hearings of the commission were held in St. John's, Halifax, Charlottetown, Fredericton, Quebec City, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Regina, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver, Victoria, Whitehorse and Yellowknife from 16 April to 4 October 1968. Further, discussion groups and interviews were conducted in four settlements in the Keewatin District and in Churchill. The commission filed 468 submissions. RG33-89 General InventoryAdditional information:General note:The commission's report, dated 28 September 1970, was tabled in the House of Commons on 7 December 1970 as: Sessional Paper No. 283-4/104, 1970-1972. The report was printed as: Report of the Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada, Ottawa, Information Canada, 1970, xvii, 488 p.
For more information about royal commissions, researchers should consult: Records of Federal Royal Commissions (RG 33) / James Murray Whalen. -- (General inventory series / Government Archives Division). -- Ottawa : National Archives of Canada, 1990).Source of title:Order in Council PC 312, 16 February 1967.Availability of other formats note:See reels C-4878 to C-4883 and C-6798 to C-6803 for microfilmed copies of the records in this series. Researchers may view these microfilms in the Reading Room.Accruals:No further accruals are expected.Related material:See also: National Archives of Canada, Florence Bayard Bird Papers, MG 31, D63, vol. 5, 1967-1971, correspondence, newspaper clippings, notebooks, and a summary of the Report of the Royal Commission on the Status of Women., National Archives of Canada, Dorothy E. and John F. Flaherty Papers, MG 31, K25, Vols. 9 and 10, 1966-1974, files on the establishment of the Royal Commission on the Status of Women, biographies of the commissioners, recommendations of the Commission and comments about the commission and its report. National Archives of Canada, Elsie Gregory MacGill Papers, MG 31, K7, Vols. 2-7, 1963-1975, includes reports, administrative records, correspondence, memoranda and annotated minutes of the Royal Commission on the Status of Women meetings., National Archives of Canada, Canadian Federation of University Women, MG 28, I196, Vols. 18-21, 1932-1976, files on the status of women, correspondence with Members of Parliament on women's issues, and files relating to education, family and native women., National Archives of Canada, National Council of Women of Canada, MG 28, I25, Vols. 143-144, 1966-1968, files on the status of women consisting of printed material, correspondence and briefs., National Archives of Canada, Documentary Art and Photography Division. Accession 1971-191: Canada. Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada. Two group photographs of members of the Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada, 1971., Researchers may also refer to a number of research studies prepared for the Commission which were published. A list of them is available in finding aid 33/89-87 part 2.Container note(s):C-4878 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 1
C-6798 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 1
C-4878 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 2
C-4878 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 3
C-4878 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 4
C-4878 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 5
C-4879 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 1
C-4879 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 2
C-4879 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 3
C-4879 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 4
C-4879 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 5
C-4879 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 6
C-4880 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 1
C-4880 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 2
C-4880 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 3
C-4880 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 4
C-4880 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 5
C-4881 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 1
C-4881 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 2
C-4881 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 3
C-4881 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 4
C-4881 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 5
C-4882 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 1
C-4882 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 2
C-4882 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 3
C-4882 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 4
C-4882 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 5
C-4883 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 1
C-4883 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 2
C-4883 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 3
C-4883 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 4
C-6798 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 2
C-6798 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 3
C-6798 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 4
C-6799 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 1
C-6799 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 2
C-6799 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 3
C-6799 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 4
C-6800 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 1
C-6800 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 2
C-6800 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 3
C-6800 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 4
C-6801 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 1
C-6801 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 2
C-6801 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 3
C-6801 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 4
C-6802 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 1
C-6802 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 2
C-6802 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 3
C-6802 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 4
C-6803 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 1
C-6803 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 2
C-6803 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 3
C-6803 : Microfilm copies Copy No. 4Source:GovernmentFormer archival reference no.:RG33-89Other accession no.:1971-0016 MISA -
Ordering and viewing options Conditions of access:Textual records[ConsultationOpen]Volume [RG 33 89][ConsultationOpen]1--45;[ConsultationOpen]24 A;[ConsultationOpen]Microfilm reel [RG33][ConsultationOpen]C-4878--C-4883;[ConsultationOpen]C-6798--C-6803;[ConsultationOpen]Sound recordings[ConsultationOpen]Terms of use:Copyright belongs to the Crown. In order to protect the fragile originals, the microfilm copies of these records must be consulted rather than the originals.You can order materials in advance to be ready for you when you visit. You will need a user card to do this.
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