Lone mothers between paid work and care : the policy regime in twenty countries
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Lone mothers between paid work and care : the policy regime in twenty countries
(Cash & care)
Ashgate, c2000
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Note
Bibliography: p. 289-304
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This is a study which compares and contrasts how lone mothers' relationships to paid work and care-giving are constructed across 20 countries, and with what outcomes for lone mothers' levels of economic well-being. In doing so, the book explores from an international perspective, the implications of the re-orientation of lone mothers' citizenship within the UK policy field from that of care-giver to paid worker. The volume engages with feminist comparative social policy literature concerned with specifying a construction of citizenship appropriate to capturing international variations in women's social rights. By incorporating social rights attached to paid work and care, as well as those which enable lone mothers to move between sequential periods of paid work and care-giving across the child-rearing cycle, the study makes a significant contribution to the literature.
Table of Contents
- Mainstream comparative welfare state research - a review
- feminist perspectives on comparative welfare state research
- lone mothers as an analytical category in an examination of how welfare states structure women's relationship to paid work and care - rationale and methods
- poor mothers - Australia, Ireland, New Zealand and the United Kingdom
- non-poor mothers - the Netherlands
- poor workers - Austria, Germany, Greece. Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, Portugal, Spain and the United States
- non-poor workers - Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Norway and Sweden
- patterns of convergence and divergence in the configuration of social rights attached to paid work, care and transitions accross 20 countries.
by "Nielsen BookData"