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Women's paid work and moral economies of care
Authors:Linda McDowell  Kathryn Ray  Diane Perrons  Colette Fagan  Kevin Ward
Affiliation:1. School of Geography , University of Oxford , Oxford, UK;2. Policy Studies Institute , London, UK;3. Department of Geography and the Environment , London School of Economics , London, UK;4. Department of Sociology , UK;5. School of Geography , University of Manchester , Manchester, UK
Abstract:Female labour force participation has been increasing in recent decades, in part encouraged by state policies to raise the employment rate to encourage economic competitiveness and combat social exclusion. Social provision for care, however, has lagged behind this increase, creating practical and moral dilemmas for individuals and for society, facing parents with complex choices about how to combine work and care. In this paper, we draw on a qualitative study in London to explore the extent to which the large-scale entry of women into waged work is altering women's understandings of their duties and responsibilities to care for others. We conclude that their decisions are influenced by class position, entrenched gender inequalities in the labour market, varying abilities to pay for care and complex gendered understandings of caring responsibilities.
Keywords:work–life balance  childcare  gendered moral rationalities  narratives of care
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