Her earliest thinking was formed in the collective action of students and workers as well as the sexual and intellectual liberation movement happening in France at that time.
Her doctoral dissertation at Simon Fraser University formed the basis of her book, Feminism and Anti-Feminism in Early Economic Thought.
[7] Pujol was a founding member of the International Association for Feminist Economics[5] She completed a book about pay equity in Canada for the University of Manitoba.
During her years in Winnipeg, Pujol helped organize the first three Gay Pride Day marches and two Canadian Women's Music festivals.
Her students and friends organized the first annual Lesbian Walk in response to homophobia experienced by Pujol and the Women's Studies Department at the University of Victoria.
The issue was edited by her colleague, Marjorie Griffin Cohen, at the Department of Women's Studies of Simon Fraser University.
Pujol participated in the History of Economics Society's annual meeting at the University of British Columbia in June 1996 with a presentation on her multi-volume anthology of women's contributions to political economy before 1900, which she was editing for publication by Routledge and Thoemmes Continuum.