Difference between revisions of "Canadian Association for Equality"

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The [[Canadian Association for Equality]] (CAFE) is a grass-roots organisation that focuses on men's issues in Canada and elsewhere. The organisation was founder and CEO is [[Justin Trottier]]. CAFE runs the [[Canadian Centre for Men and Families]] in Toronto.
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The [[Canadian Association for Equality]] (CAFE) is a Canadian non-profit organisation. CAFE has frequently been characterised as a [[men's rights]] group by sources, though the organization denies this. In March 2014 the Canadian Association for Equality was granted charitable status by the Canada Revenue Agency, making it the first charity focused on men's issues.<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Association_for_Equality</ref>
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CAFE is sometimes portrayed as a moderate and academic voice, particularly by members of men's movement, such as author [[Warren Farrell]], though media reports have characterised the group as controversial, and various [[feminist]], student, and anti-domestic violence groups associate CAFE with men's rights organisations such as [[A Voice for Men]]. CAFE spokesperson Justin Trottier has denied this.<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Association_for_Equality</ref>
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CAFE hosts a regular series of speakers and talks, featuring speakers such [[Warren Farrell]], former University of Ottawa English Professor [[Janice Fiamengo]], and McGill Professors [[Katherine Young]] and [[Paul Nathanson]]. Other events have included a presentation by York University Sociologist Dr. [[Robert Kenedy]] on the new discipline of male studies, a talk by National Post columnist [[Barbara Kay]] on family courts and fatherhood, and a talk by prostate cancer survivor Aaron Bacher on men's health. The group has also hosted anthropologist Lionel Tiger.<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Association_for_Equality</ref>
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CAFE runs the [[Canadian Centre for Men and Families]] in Toronto.
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== See Also ==
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*[[Canadian Centre for Men and Families]]
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*[[Justin Trottier]]
   
 
== External Links ==
 
== External Links ==
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*[http://menandfamilies.org/ Canadian Centre for Men and Families]
 
*[http://menandfamilies.org/ Canadian Centre for Men and Families]
   
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{{Wikipedia}}
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== References ==
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[[Category: CAFE]]
 
[[Category: Canada]]
 
[[Category: Canada]]
 
[[Category: Featured Articles]]
 
[[Category: Featured Articles]]
 
[[Category: Men's Issues]]
 
[[Category: Men's Issues]]
 
[[Category: Organisations]]
 
[[Category: Organisations]]
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[[Category: Wikipedia]]

Latest revision as of 13:37, 3 April 2023

The Canadian Association for Equality (CAFE) is a Canadian non-profit organisation. CAFE has frequently been characterised as a men's rights group by sources, though the organization denies this. In March 2014 the Canadian Association for Equality was granted charitable status by the Canada Revenue Agency, making it the first charity focused on men's issues.[1]

CAFE is sometimes portrayed as a moderate and academic voice, particularly by members of men's movement, such as author Warren Farrell, though media reports have characterised the group as controversial, and various feminist, student, and anti-domestic violence groups associate CAFE with men's rights organisations such as A Voice for Men. CAFE spokesperson Justin Trottier has denied this.[2]

CAFE hosts a regular series of speakers and talks, featuring speakers such Warren Farrell, former University of Ottawa English Professor Janice Fiamengo, and McGill Professors Katherine Young and Paul Nathanson. Other events have included a presentation by York University Sociologist Dr. Robert Kenedy on the new discipline of male studies, a talk by National Post columnist Barbara Kay on family courts and fatherhood, and a talk by prostate cancer survivor Aaron Bacher on men's health. The group has also hosted anthropologist Lionel Tiger.[3]

CAFE runs the Canadian Centre for Men and Families in Toronto.

See Also

External Links


This article contains information imported from the English Wikipedia. In most cases the page history will have details. If you need information on the importation and have difficulty obtaining it please contact the site administrators. Wikipedia shows a strong woke bias. Text copied over from Wikipedia can be corrected and improved.

References