Academic Articles

Potvin, Jacqueline and Mayme Lefurgey. (2024). “'Canada Remains Deeply Concerned”: (de)Politicized Feminist Foreign Aid, Settler Colonialism, and Reproductive Justice in Occupied Gaza. Canadian Foreign Policy Journal .

Potvin, Jacqueline. (2024). Medicalisation, depoliticisation and reproductive stratification: lessons from Canada’s Muskoka Initiative. Feminist Theory 25(3).

Potvin, Jacqueline and Laura Cayen. (2023). “Unlocking Digital Futures for Girls: Postfeminism, Healthism and the ‘Girl Effect’ in Plan International’s Digital Empowerment Campaign”. Girlhood Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 16(2).

Potvin, Jacqueline and Kimberly Dority (2022). “Feminist Pedagogy in the Neoliberal University: Exploring the Limits of Precarious Labour”. Atlantis: Critical Studies in Gender, Culture and Social Justice, 43(1).

Potvin, Jacqueline. (2020). Neoliberal Governance, Healthism and Maternal Responsibility under Canada’s Muskoka Initiative. In Levasseur, Paterson and Turnbull (Eds.) Thriving Mothers/Depriving Mothers: Mothering and Welfare. Toronto: Demeter Press.

Potvin, Jacqueline (2019). Governing Adolescent Reproduction in the ‘Developing World’: Biopower and Governmentality in Plan’s ‘Because I’m a Girl’ Campaign. Feminist Review, 122.

Potvin, Dominique A., Emily Burdfield-Steel, Jacqueline Potvin, and Stephen Heap. (2018).Diversity Begets Diversity: a Global Perspective on Gender Equality in Scientific Society Leadership. PLoS ONE 13(5)

Potvin, Jacqueline. (2016). Pernicious Pregnancy and Redemptive Motherhood: Narratives of Reproductive Choice in Joss Whedon’s Angel. Slayage: the Journal of Joss Whedon Studies 14(1).

Potvin, Jacqueline. (2015) Mobilizing Motherhood: the Use of Maternal Myths in Popular Development Discourse. Journal of Global Justice: Theory Practice Rhetoric, 8(1).

Potvin, Jacqueline M. (2010). Bodies in the Interregnum: Performances of Gender and Race in July’s People and Nelson Mandela: a Very Short Introduction. Footnotes: The University of Guelph’s Undergraduate Feminist Journal 3: 85-95.