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Journal ArticleDOI

Managing the Margins: Gender, Citizenship, and the International Regulation of Precarious Employment

Rina Agarwala
- 01 Nov 2011 - 
- Vol. 40, Iss: 6, pp 760-762
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TLDR
A broader view on gender inequalities and the production of wellbeing, with the capability approach serving as the theoretical connection between the chapters, is presented in this paper. But the description of the theory remains lacking amidst numerous references that point the reader towards clarification elsewhere.
Abstract
Gender inequality remains both a pressing social issue and a fruitful area of social science research. This edited volume seeks to examine gender inequality and the production of well-being in Europe from an interdisciplinary perspective that is perhaps more feminist economics than sociology. The chapters draw on historical and contemporary European examples and offer a somewhat different take (both theoretically and methodologically) on what is usually found in American sociology journals. This book takes a broader view on gender inequalities and the production of wellbeing, with the ‘‘capability approach’’ serving as the theoretical connection between the chapters. The chapters reemphasize that social reproduction is more complex than the production of goods. The various authors also call for and (in the empirical chapters) take into account the socio-political and economic context. An entire chapter is dedicated to the introduction of the capability approach (Chapter Two). But the description of the theory remains lacking amidst numerous references that point the reader towards clarification elsewhere. The authors posit that well-being is an important outcome, and that the production of well-being itself needs to be included in the study of gender inequality (Chapter One), while also demanding that women are not just another vulnerable group (Chapter Four). Chapter Three further challenges conventional notions about the evolution of the ‘‘modern family’’ in the wake of the industrialization process, and argues that the fragility of families is not a novel concept. These theoretical chapters call for a more multidimensional assessment of gender inequality, and remind readers of the importance of the concept and production of well-being. The topics covered in the two empirical parts of the book are very diverse in terms of subject, methodology, and historical time period. The first empirical section ‘‘Gender Care and Work’’ is held together by the challenge to the idea of women as passive victims and in need of assistance. Chapter Five demonstrates widows’ relative economic independence in urban Sweden and Finland from 1890 to 1910, and Chapter Six shows the centrality of female relatives in caring for extended family members in times of crisis. Chapter Seven reaffirms the idea that intergenerational support is not one-sided, and those often thought of as needing care due to older age are also givers of care and other forms of support. The findings from the chapters emphasize the importance of non-monetary transfers outside the market system. The theme of caregiving is readdressed in later chapters which illustrate how home caregiving in Belgium is situated between the public/market divide (Chapter Nine) and the problems of combining market work with caregiving, especially for those in the ‘‘sandwich generation’’ (Chapter Ten). In a seeming departure from studies in the capability approach tradition, Chapter Eight is a more typical time-use study that examines the gender asymmetry in unpaid labor in Italy. The results are not novel as women are found to do more unpaid work, especially in couples with children. The second empirical part of the book focuses on the intra-household allocation of resources. Three of the five chapters in this section center primarily on the nineteenth century, examining consumption patterns in Spain (Chapter 11), gender differences in children’s schooling in Switzerland (Chapter 12), and the differences in the treatment of and opportunities for celibate men and women in the Pyrenees (Chapter 13). These chapters illustrate gender differences, but not in

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Journal ArticleDOI

Contesting, (Re)producing or Surviving Precarity? Debates on Precarious Work and Informal Labor Reexamined

TL;DR: The discursive traverses of "precarious work" invoke a wide range of meanings, from a political frame of reference for new labor and social movements to conceptualizations framing scholarly inquiries and institutional policymaking as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Leased Among Us: Precarious Work, Local Regulation, and the Taxi Industry:

TL;DR: In this paper, a case study of the taxi industry in San Diego, where 89 percent of drivers leased their vehicles as independent contractors (IC), showed how local regulation has enforced precarity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Leave policies in Europe: current policies, future directions

TL;DR: A review of the development of leave policies in Europe, both at a regional and national level, and what future directions such policies might take to meet changing conditions and emerging needs is presented in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Precarization, Informalization, and Marx:

TL;DR: The authors argued that informalization and precarization are used primarily to understand economic dynamics in the Global South and the Global North, respectively, and that precarisation is used primarily in the analysis of the labor market in the global North.
Journal ArticleDOI

The implications of Australian women’s precarious employment for the later pension age:

TL;DR: The increase in pension eligibility ages in Australia, as elsewhere, throws into relief the consequences of gender inequality in employment as mentioned in this paper, because of career histories in lower paid and more insec...
References
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MonographDOI

Passionate Politics: Emotions and Social Movements

TL;DR: Goodwin, James M. Jasper, and Francesca Polletta reverse this trend, reincorporating emotions such as anger, indignation, fear, disgust, joy, and love into research on politics and social protest as mentioned in this paper.
Book

Life and Words: Violence and the Descent into the Ordinary

Veena Das
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a portrait of the Abducted Woman: The Citizen as Sexed and the Act of Witnessing: Violence, Gender, and Subjectivity.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Purchase of Intimacy

TL;DR: Calasanti and Slevin this paper argued that the gerontologist had much to learn about methodology from the post-structural feminist and that age matters. But despite these nits and picks, the book convinced me.
Journal ArticleDOI

The state of the union

James Galloway
- 11 Jul 1970 -