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Carmen Poulin, PhD
Lynne Gouliquer, MA, CD
Department of Psychology
Department of Sociology
University of New Brunswick
McGill University







Copyright DND Photo Gallery
www.dnd.ca




Lesbians, Gay Men, and the Canadian Military

References

Belkin, A. & McNichol, J. (2000). Effects of the 1992 lifting of restrictions on gay and lesbian service in the Canadian Forces: Appraising the evidence. (Research Report No. 1). Santa Barbara, CA: The Center for the Study of Sexual Minorities in the Military.

CANFORGEN 094/96. 1996. Same-sex partner benefits. Ottawa: National Defence Headquarters.

Carmichael, K. (1999, April 12) Gay solideirs file for same sex benefits: 17 claims granter: Survey. National Post, p. A5.

Gouliquer, L. (1998). A menace to the gender order: The management of lesbian sexuality in the Canadian military. Unpublished master’s research paper, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Gouliquer, L. (2000). Negotiating sexuality: Lesbians in the Canadian military. In B. Miedema, J. M. Stoppard, & V. Anderson (Eds.), Women’s bodies women’s lives: Health, well-being, and body image (pp. 254-276). Toronto, ON: Sumach Press.

Gouliquer, L. (2003). Post-1992: The Canadian Military and Homosexuality. Invited Guest Speaker at Experiences of Foreign Militaries Roundtable. Don’t Ask, Don’t’ Tell: 10 Years Later Conference, Hofstra University, Hempstead, New York (September. 18-20).

Park, R. E. (1994). Opening the Canadian Forces to gays and lesbians: An inevitable decision but improbable reconfiguration. In W. J. Scott & S. C. Stanley (Eds.), Gays and lesbians in the military: Issues, concerns, and contrasts (pp. 165-179). New York: Aldine de Gruyter.

Poulin, C. (2001). “The military is the wife and I am the mistress”: Partners of lesbians in the Canadian military. Atlantis, 26, 65-76.






© 2003 C.Poulin