Bibliographic Information

Women, work and care in the Asia-Pacific

edited by Marian Baird, Michele Ford and Elizabeth Hill

(ASAA women in Asia series / editor, Louise Edwards, 50)

Routledge, 2018, c2017

  • : pbk

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Note

First published: 2017

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book provides a comparative analysis of the social, economic, industrial and migration dynamics that structure women's paid work and unpaid care work experience in the Asia-Pacific region. Each country-focused chapter examines the formal and informal ways in which work and care are managed, the changing institutional landscape, gender relations and fertility concerns, employer and trade union responses and the challenges policy makers face and the consequences of their decisions for working women. By covering the entire region, including Australia and New Zealand, the book highlights the way different national work and care regimes are linked through migration, with wealthier countries looking to their poorer neighbours for alternative sources of labour. In addition, the book contributes to debates about the barriers to women's participation in the workforce, the valuation of unpaid care, the gender wage gap, social protection and labour regulation for migrant workers and gender relations in developing Asia.

Table of Contents

1. Work/Care Regimes in the Asia-Pacific: A Feminist Framework Part I: Familial/Informal Care Regimes 2. China: The Reconfiguring of Women, Work and Care 3. Malaysia: Balancing Paid and Unpaid Work 4. Singapore: Contradictions in the Work/Care Regime 5. Indonesia: Middle-class Complicity and State Failure to Provide Care 6. The Philippines: Pressures for Change in the Work/Care Regime 7. Cambodia: Managing Work and Care in a Post-Conflict Context 8. Bangladesh: Class, Precarity and the Politics of Care 9. India: Economic Inequality and Social Reproduction 10. Sri Lanka: Working Realities and Gendered Fictions Part II: Familial/Formal Care Regimes 11. Australia: The Care Challenge 12. New Zealand: Caring for Women or Women Caring? Part III: Predominantly Familial Care Regimes 13. Japan: From Social Reproduction to Gender Equality 14. South Korea: Work, Care and the Wollstonecraft Dilemma 15. Timor-Leste: Mixed Messages on Work and Care 16. Papua New Guinea: Work and Care in a Subsistence Economy

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