Population and social policy in France

書誌事項

Population and social policy in France

edited by Máire Cross and Sheila Perry

Pinter, 1997

  • : hc

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 22

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Population growth and its related issues have long been on the political agenda in France in a way which distinguishes her from her European neighbours and particularly from Britain. This work explores recent developments in population studies and the policies which spring from them. It examines such areas as: women, birth and motherhood; questions of migration and immigration from the point of view of women and intermarriage; and issues related to the numbers in work.

目次

  • Part 1 Births, marriages and migration: does France still have a population policy?
  • the demographic argument in France - coherence, reference and metaphors
  • Marianne and the mother rabbits - feminism and natality under the Third Republic
  • in-vitro fertilization in France - a feminist critique
  • men, women, work and family size in France - a feminist perspective
  • in search of the missing female subject - comments on French migration research
  • sexual and racial boundaries - colonialism and Franco-Algerian intermarriage (1880-1962)
  • families on the front line
  • mixed marriage in France. Part 2 Work, health and education: French companies faced with an ageing work force
  • strands of militancy in the history of the CGT
  • an ecologist critique of work in France
  • the social security headache - the necessary but elusive reform
  • government policy and higher education - the numbers game
  • epilogue - May in December?

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