"This is an ambitious and largely successful book. It deserves a wide readership because of its potential to expand the historiography about work, rights and rights movements, and policy (federal and provincial) - in the style of the new disability history - by bringing a disability analysis to bear on these topics." --Jason Ellis, University of British Columbia, H-Net Reviews "The strength of Working towards Equity is the rich narrative the author weaves. Detail surrounding the intricacies and complex relationships among the various disability voices is provided, ensuring that this volume will be well cited for years to come. Even better is the fact that it is grounded in the employment experiences of thirty disabled people over a period of forty years." --Mario Levesque, Mount Allison University, BC Studies " Working towards Equity makes a notable and worthwhile contribution to the field of disability studies as well as to social policy, labour history, and social movement activism studies in Canada. The illustrations and photographs are terrific features helping to bring alive the history, making it both personal and political." --Michael J.
Prince, Faculty of Human and Social Development, University of Victoria and Author of 'Absent Citizens: Disability Politics and Policy in Canada' " Working towards Equity draws from a broad array of sources, including archived manuscript collections, documentary films, interviews, government reports, and published monographs and articles. Filling a significant gap in the historiography of disability rights, employment, and labour, this study makes a significant contribution to twentieth-century social and cultural history." --Michael Rembis, Department of History, University of Buffalo, SUNY.