Care work, both paid and unpaid, contributes to well-being, social development and economic growth. But the costs of providing care are unequally borne across gender and social class. Feminist scholarship on the gendered construction of welfare provisioning and welfare regimes has produced a conceptually strong and empirically grounded analysis of care, reinforcing the necessity of rethinking the distinctions between "the public" and "the private" as well as the links between them. Yet this analysis, premised on post-industrial contexts, does not travel easily to other parts of the world. Many of its core assumptions – about family structures, labor markets, state capacities, and public social provisioning – do not hold for a wider range of countries. Drawing on original research on the care economy in three developing regions (Africa, Asia, Latin America), this volume addresses a major empirical lacuna while facilitating a conversation across the North-South divide.
Contents:
1. Introduction: Global Variations in the Political and Social Economy of Care: Worlds Apart?
Shahra Razavi and Silke Staab
Section I: Care’s Place Re-Imagined
2. Democratic Care Politics in an Age of Limits
Joan Tronto
Section II: Shaping the Policy Agenda: Care in Advanced Industrialized Economies
3. Advanced Economy, Modern Welfare State and Traditional Care Regimes: The Case of Switzerland
Mascha Madörin, Brigitte Schnegg and Nadia Baghdadi
4. The Struggle Against Familialism: Reconfiguring the Care Diamond in Japan
Emiko Ochiai, Aya Abe, Takafumi Uzuhashi, Yuko Tamiya and Masato Shikata
5. The Boss, the Worker, His Wife, and No Babies: South Korean Political and Social Economy of Care in a Context of Institutional Rigidities
Ito Peng
Section III: Different Worlds? The Challenge of Care in a Development Context 6. Beyond Maternalism? The Political and Social Organization of Childcare in Argentina
Valeria Esquivel and Eleonor Faur
7. The Limits of Family and Community Care: Challenges for Public Policy in Nicaragua
Juliana Martinez-Franzoni and Koen Voorend
8. Care in South Africa: A Legacy of Family Disruption
Debbie Budlender and Francie Lund
9. Unpaid and Overstretched: Coping with HIV & AIDS in Tanzania
Debbie Budlender and Ruth Meena
10. Between the State, Market, and Family: Structures, Policies, and Practices of Care in India
Rajni Palriwala and N. Neetha
Section IV: The Politics of Care ‘Going Public’: Actors and Institutions
11. Claims and Frames in the Making of Care Policies
Fiona Williams
12. Harmonizing Global Care Policy? Care and the Commission on the Status of Women
Kate Bedford
Section V: Global Care Chains: The Transnational Aspects of Care
13. The Globalisation of Paid Care Labour Migration: Dynamics, Impacts and Policy
Nicola Yeates
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