Feminist Perspectives on Family Care: Policies for Gender JusticeSAGE Publications, 29 ago 1995 - 432 pagine Today women find themselves playing an ever-increasing role in caring for older family members who are frail, developmentally disabled, or suffering from serious mental illness. While this has role of women as caregivers has been documented, the actual impact on the lives of women has remained largely unstudied. In this volume, the authors examine caregiving as a central feminist issue, looking at its impact on women socially, personally, and economically. The authors review how changing family structures, the changing economy and workforce, and the changing health care demands of needy adults have impacted on women′s lives. They critique existing public and private policies, demonstrating a need for fundamental structural changes in social institutions and attitudes to improve the lives of women. Finally, they propose a social model of care that is oriented toward gender justice--recognition of the work of caring and its impact upon women socially, personally, and economically. For students, scholars and practitioners in the field of gerontology, gender studies, and social work, this book is a must. |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 80
... mother , daughter , wife , granddaughter , grandmother— typically provides the majority of family care for adults with chronic disabilities ( Finley , 1989 ; Older Women's League , 1989 ) . Many women often care for more than one ...
... mother , later as a middle - aged daughter for a chronically ill parent , and extending into demands in old age of caring for a partner with disabilities . Mothers of children with chronic mental illness or developmental disability face ...
... mothers , especially their lower economic status , are played out across their lives in caring for adults with disabilities . A feminist analysis recognizes how caring for family across the life course has severe negative economic ...
... mother . ” A women's issues perspective often limits the analysis of caring to a single gender . These studies rely almost exclusively on female informants and thus only women's voices are heard . Men and their roles in the family are ...
... mothers , caregivers of adults were peripheral , and marginalized as the " other " ( Freeman , 1990 ) . By focusing on issues primarily affecting women earlier in their life cycle , feminism in the 1960s and 1970s ignored the issue of ...
Sommario
1 | |
15 | |
Part I The Changing Societal Context for Caregiving | 39 |
Chapter 2 Americas Changing Families | 43 |
Chapter 3 The Changing American Economy and Workforce | 58 |
Chapter 4 Changing Health Care Needs and LongTerm Care Services | 75 |
Part II The ContextExtentand Nature of Caregiving for Dependents | 105 |
Chapter 5 The SocialPoliticaland Historical Context of Caregiving for Dependents | 107 |
Chapter 10 A Feminist Critique of FamilyRelated Benefits in the Workplace | 210 |
Part IV Toward a Feminist Agenda for Family Caregivers | 235 |
A Feminist Approach | 241 |
Chapter 12 Social Services and Social Supports | 265 |
Achieving a More Family Responsive Workplace | 291 |
A Feminist Perspective | 318 |
Toward a National Caregiver Coalition | 339 |
References | 357 |
Chapter 6 The Gendered Nature of Care | 120 |
Chapter 7 The Consequences of Caring | 136 |
Part ΙII A Feminist Critique of Current Policies and Programs | 159 |
Chapter 8 A Feminist Critique of Americas Family Policy | 163 |
Chapter 9 A Feminist Critique of LongTerm Care Policies | 183 |
Name Index | 394 |
Subject Index | 405 |
About the Authors | 417 |
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Feminist Perspectives on Family Care: Policies for Gender Justice Nancy R. Hooyman,Judith Gonyea Anteprima non disponibile - 1995 |