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Theorizing Women's Work

Network Basics (1990)

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  1. The family: long‐term care research and policy formulation.Patricia McKeever - 1996 - Nursing Inquiry 3 (4):200-206.
    In industrialized democracies, contractionist social welfare policies have transformed healthcare systems. This has led to reallocations of long‐term care work that have perpetuated gender inequities. The appropriated work of female family caregivers substitutes for paid nursing work, and the household is the primary site for long‐term care delivery. In this article, central premises of critical social theory are used to analyse current long‐term care policy and to explicate how research facilitated the development of mixed economies of care. Problematic consequences of (...)
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  • Protecting the boundary: Teleworker insights on the expansive concept of “work”.Kiran Mirchandani - 1998 - Gender and Society 12 (2):168-187.
    Feminist scholars have consistently argued for broadened definitions of work that include the invisible family and emotion work done predominantly by women. This article focuses on women's resistances to placing these various activities into the common category of work. Drawing from interviews with teleworkers, it examines how and why women narrowed the meaning of work and explores some of the costs that may accompany a more expansive definition of work.
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