• Title/Summary/Keyword: 무급 돌봄노동

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Institutionalization of Care Labor and Differences among Women (돌봄노동의 제도화와 여성들의 차이)

  • Lee, Sook-Jin
    • Issues in Feminism
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    • v.11 no.2
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    • pp.49-83
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    • 2011
  • This article explores the characteristics of care and care labor which is core keyword of the welfare state and the way of institutionalization of care labor, focusing specially on differences among women. Caring is defined by the expression of morality and labor accompanied by concrete action. But, care labor in the welfare state is defined by "activities involved in caring for the ill, elderly, handicapped and dependent", and I think, that definition is more useful than the narrow one for policy institutionalization. But the latter definition intentionally separates the domestic work from care work. Care labor is considered to be different from the market labor in terms of motivations, but there are some limits in standardization and commercialization of the traits of emotional and moral engagement. Thus, requiring of emotional motivation as one of the job descriptions is not realistic. Welfare state is institutionalizing women's unpaid care work in family through de-familization, and its policy tools are cash benefits and services for care-related, which influence to the female wage worker and fulltime housewife, care receiver and care giver, and polarization of women's class in a very different way. Cash benefits enhances the division of gender labor, polarizes the care laborer and weakens of expansion the care as decent job. The movement of feminist welfare state have a vision of universal service expansion and need the policy list for de-gendering of care labor.

A Comparative Analysis of Childcare Expansion and Social Investment in Sweden, France, Germany, the UK, Japan and South Korea (스웨덴, 프랑스, 독일, 영국, 일본, 한국의 아동 돌봄 체제와 사회투자에 대한 비교 연구)

  • An, Mi-Young
    • 한국사회정책
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    • v.20 no.2
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    • pp.169-193
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    • 2013
  • This paper examines how a social investment approach can be applied in a comparative analysis of childcare arrangements. We compared changes in Sweden, France, Germany, the UK, Japan and Korea during the 2000s, focusing on four dimensions of social investment: activation, gender equality, quality of care, and the degree of state's intervention in the family. We considered leave systems and the number of children enrolled in formal care and education facilities as indicators for labour market activation. For gender equality, women's position in employment is considered with respect to labour market participation rates, proportion of permanent employment, and wage-sex ratio. Quality of care concerns child-to-staff ratio and care provided with government quality control. The state's intervention was measured as social spending on families as proportions of GDP and total social spending. Our analysis provides empirical evidence that Sweden and France are pioneers in this arena and that the UK, Germany, Korea, and Japan are path-shifters in their care paradigms, albeit to varying degrees. Is the social investment approach an adequate paradigm for care? In a normative sense, this approach has potential. However, the following issues remain unaddressed: gender equality should be achieved through an expansion in good-quality jobs, fathers should be encouraged to take on childcare duties, and families should have universal access to good-quality childcare services controlled by the government.

Diversification of Family Types and the Problems of Women's Role in Russia: focused on the Work-Family Reconciliation Experiences of Women in the big cities. (러시아 가족형태 다양화와 여성의 역할 문제: 대도시 여성의 일·가족 양립 경험을 중심으로)

  • 서승현
    • Russian Language and Literature
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    • no.62
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    • pp.237-270
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    • 2018
  • According to the UN report, the question of the position and roles of women in society is a important global problem. Nowadays the form of the family in which the man was the breadwinner, changes its shape. Model family with two working parents looks more reasonable to modern reality. Russian Woman seeks to equality in the family to combine family and work. They want to realize herself not only in the home, but also in the professional field more. So I observe the experience of the changing roles of the women in today's Russian family and work. The method of the article is in-depth interview of working women, who have a child. Starting from a question, how to think Russian women about their marriage and family relationships, the article analyses the tendencies of them. The model of marriage and family seems to be various types such as a tendency of pluralism in post-soviet society. But the Russian family policy don't include their real problems with various families. And the analysis of the interview shows that it is necessary to improve the balance of work and family life for gender equality in a changing society. Because the traditional model of family changes by another model of the dual-earner families, where there is partnership and equality. The work-family reconciliation policy for gender equality needs to aim the socialization of caring for working parents and to encourage Russian men's participation in childcare.

The Effect of the Parental Care Burden on the Labor Force Participation of the Middle Aged and Older Women (중.고령층 여성의 노부모 수발과 경제활동참여)

  • Choi, Young;Sim, Kyungsoo
    • Korean Journal of Social Welfare
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    • v.66 no.3
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    • pp.277-295
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    • 2014
  • This study was purposed to examine the effect of the parental care burden on the labor force participation of the middle aged and older women. For this, this study used 2,125 samples aged from 50 to 70 years old that were extracted from 1st and 2nd wave of the Korean Retirement and Income Study(KReIS). In order to examine the causal relationship between two variables, Generalized Estimating Equation(GEE) and Multi-nominal Regression analysis were performed. The results showed that there was a positive effect of the parental care burden on the labor force participation of the middle aged and older women. However, this effect was limited only to the employment to the unpaid family workers. In addition, the effect was varied according to the level of caring time to the old parents. Based on that, several policy and practical implications were suggested.

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