Identity area
Reference code
Title
Date(s)
- 1975-1976, 1996-2014, 2019, 2022 (Creation)
Level of description
Fonds
Extent and medium
0.26 m textual records (2 boxes)
6 audio cassettes
4776 digital files (844 MB)
Context area
Name of creator
Biographical history
Barbara Kahan (1951–) is a Canadian writer, publisher, and retired researcher in the field of health promotion. From 1997-2009, Kahan worked with the University of Toronto’s Centre for Health Promotion where, through her role in the Best Practices Working Group, she took an active role in the development of a best practices approach to health promotion.
Kahan was born in North Battleford, Saskatchewan, and raised in Regina, Saskatchewan. She earned a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from the University of Saskatchewan in 1972.
After completing undergraduate studies, Kahan worked for several non-profit community groups in Saskatchewan, Montreal, and Toronto. In Toronto, Kahan was employed as an Intake Worker (1975-1977) at the Neighbourhood Information Centre (NIC), a non-profit information and referral centre serving the East York community of Toronto. Following this, Kahan worked in the book and publishing industry, first in London, England, at the Women in Print feminist printing collective (1978-1979), then in Regina, SK, at Tumbleweed Books, a community bookstore collective (1980-1983).
From 1984 to 1996, Kahan worked on various contracts in health and social issues research, evaluation, teaching, and policy analysis, including at Saskatchewan Health and the University of Regina. In 1995, Kahan earned a Certificate in Adult Education from St. Francis Xavier University. Throughout this period, Kahan produced several publications including the book Healthier Children (1990) and served as the Executive Director of the Saskatchewan Publishers Group (1992-1996).
In 1996, Kahan began graduate studies at the University of Toronto Graduate Department of Community Health where she received the James A. McNab Award (1996-1997) and an Open Master’s Fellowship (1997-1998). She graduated with a MHSc in Health Promotion in 1998.
Before completing graduate studies, Kahan joined the University of Toronto Centre for Health Promotion’s Best Practices Working Group where she performed preliminary research on continuous quality improvement (CQI) and best practices in health promotion. Shortly after graduating in 1998, she accepted the role of Member at the Centre. In this role, she co-led the development, implementation, and evaluation of a comprehensive conceptual framework called the Interactive Domain Model (IDM) Approach to Best Practices (BP) in Health Promotion. Kahan published numerous articles and facilitated many workshops on health promotion and the IDM throughout her time with the Centre.
Following the completion of her MHSc, Kahan returned to Saskatchewan where, in addition to her work for the Centre for Health Promotion, she continued her career in health and social issues consulting. She retired from health and social issues research ca. 2012.
In addition to her career in health promotion and community services, Kahan is a writer who has published several poems, plays, and a novel, Elemental Eve (2023). She serves as Editor at the small press publisher Wild Sage Press. Barbara Kahan lives in Saskatoon with her partner, Evan Morris. Together they have two children and two grandchildren.
The way archival record creators identify themselves and are identified by others is key to understanding the perspectives and content of their records. Barbara Kahan uses she/her pronouns. Additional information from the creator about identity was not provided. Kahan is socially understood to be white.
Archival history
Immediate source of acquisition or transfer
Content and structure area
Scope and content
Fonds comprises textual records, audio recordings, and digital files and photographs documenting Barbara Kahan’s academic and professional activities in health promotion and community support services. Series 1 documents her community work with the Neighbourhood Information Centre (NIC). Series 2 and 3 document her time as a graduate student in the Health Promotion program at the University of Toronto. Series 4 and 5 document her work with the University of Toronto’s Centre for Health Promotion (defunct ca. 2009), an affiliate of the Department of Public Health Sciences. Series 5 pertains specifically to Kahan’s work on the Interactive Domain Model (IDM) framework.
Records in the fonds primarily document Kahan’s work with the Centre for Health Promotion, with material types including manuals, minutes, correspondence, reports, research data (including interview audio recordings and transcripts), proposals, workshop materials, planning documents, articles (including drafts), photographs, and computer program and website files. Also included are research notes, article drafts, correspondence, newsletters, pamphlets, and reports from Kahan’s time as a graduate student and community worker. Digital file formats are predominantly text documents (.doc, .docx, .pdf, .rtf, .wpd), spreadsheets (.xls), PowerPoint files (.ppt), image files (.bmp, .gif, .jpg), webpages (.htm), and drawing files (.vsd).
Appraisal, destruction and scheduling
Accruals
System of arrangement
Materials are arranged into series identified by Kahan at the time of transfer to the archives. Digital files have been incorporated into these series according to designations made by Kahan.
Conditions of access and use area
Conditions governing access
Open, except for the following files which are restricted:
- Series 3: B2022-0010/004(03), B2022-0010_df002
- Series 5: B2022-0010/001(07)
Please see series-level access notes for details.
Conditions governing reproduction
Language of material
- Chinese
- English
- French
- Greek
- Hindi
- Italian
Script of material
Language and script notes
Physical characteristics and technical requirements
Finding aids
Uploaded finding aid
Allied materials area
Existence and location of originals
Existence and location of copies
Related units of description
Notes area
Note
Digital files were transferred from a USB flash drive and are dated based on last modified dates. Duplicate files and files that lacked research value were not retained. A spreadsheet inventory of all digital files is available upon request by email.
Alternative identifier(s)
Accession
Access points
Subject access points
Place access points
Name access points
Genre access points
Description control area
Description identifier
Institution identifier
Rules and/or conventions used
Dates of creation revision deletion
- Finding aid by Chloe Chaitov, Aug. 2024
- Added to AtoM by E. Sommers, Aug. 2024