Buttedahl and
Knute worked together at the Canadian Association for Adult Education (now the Canadian Association for the Study of Adult Education) in Toronto, Ontario, until they moved to
Vancouver,
British Columbia in 1978, taking up an academic position at the Faculty of Education at the
University of British Columbia. She would eventually return to Ontario in the mid-1980s, becoming project manager and program director for the
International Development Research Centre (IDRC), while her husband worked with the
Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), conducting and implementing projects on international development and global education, mainly in Latin America and Asia. They would return to Vancouver in the late 1990s. In 1980, while working in academia, she and Knute co-founded a non-government-organization (
NGO) to provide services in Global Education to developing countries. They launched Buttedahl R&D Associates (BRDA ), an
R&D firm which published adult education material and international development reports about sustainable education,
Global R&D management, and integration of academics and field research working across borders, multicultural and multilingual settings, and multiple time zones to ensure smooth transfer of new knowledge and technology to other groups or departments involved in innovation. BRDA was based in Vancouver, providing consultancy services in research, editing, and publishing to projects funded by international agencies and organizations. Their clients included the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), The United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organization (
UNESCO), the
U.S. Agency for International Development (
USAID), and the
Organization of American States (OAS). (according to 2007/2008
Human Development Report) In 1998, Buttedahl launched
VIA Vancouver Institute for the Americas, a Global Education arm at UBC operating in partnership with the Vancouver Institute Lectures program, to support research on Human Resources Development and Training Programs for worldwide implementations.
VIA Vancouver Institute for the Americas assisted programs under the umbrella of
UNESCO and
CIDA, and it also participated in large multinational Educational Reform implementations. After the death of Knute, she began to work on the evolution of VIA's own creative projects centered in
women in development, and took an academic position in Victoria BC at
Royal Roads University, where she went on to launch a master's program centered on peace building and governance. While working in Victoria, she met and married her third and last husband,
John K. Park. == Legacy ==