T
Trisha Xing
Researcher at Brock University
Publications - 6
Citations - 44
Trisha Xing is an academic researcher from Brock University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Extended family & Recreation. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications receiving 27 citations.
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Negotiating the Complexities and Risks of Interdisciplinary Qualitative Research
TL;DR: In this paper, the experiences of an interdisciplinary research team that engaged in a qualitative research program for over 5 years, beginning with the grant writing process through to the end of the program, are described.
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Family leisure and the coming out process for LGB young people and their parents
TL;DR: This paper examined how the coming out process for young people who identify as lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) shaped the meanings and experiences of their family leisure engagement, highlighting the significant role of mothers as well as extended family members who identified as LGB (i.e. aunts, uncles) in mediating familial relationships.
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I am more than a mom: Stories of parental leave during the transition to motherhood in Canada
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State of leisure studies in Australia and New Zealand
John Tower,Richard McGrath,Ruth Sibson,Daryl Adair,Nadia Bevan,Graham Brown,Carmel Foley,Simone Fullagar,Lyndal Gray,CJ Hawkins,Ruth Jeanes,Roslyn Kerr,Kate Martin,Hazel Maxwell,Katie McDonald,Nicole Peel,Arianne Carvalhedo Reis,Trisha Xing,Rachel Yerbury,Jo An Zimmerman +19 more
TL;DR: A recurring theme has emerged from past ANZALS (Australia and New Zealand Association for Leisure Studies) Conferences' keynote presentations concerning the status of leisure studies from a teaching and research perspective.
Playing with motherhood: The politics of leisure and the transition to motherhood in Montreal and Toronto
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors apply feminist policy analysis to investigate the ways in which leisure is represented in the policy frameworks facing new mothers in Toronto and Montreal and argue that despite considerable policy gains, the role of leisure as a mechanism of wellbeing has been neglected in social policy discussions, thus muting its potential to transform social relations.