Results 201 to 210 of about 278,856 (261)
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Double Presence, Paid Work, and Domestic-Family Work
NEW SOLUTIONS: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy, 2011Double presence, which is understood as the need to respond simultaneously to the demands of paid and domestic-family work, mostly affects women and may negatively affect their health. Our hypothesis is that double presence increases as a function of the demands of domestic-family work, but is also associated with management practices related to the ...
Neus, Moreno +3 more
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2000
As discussed in Chapter 1, the term ‘domestic work’ refers to the unpaid work carried out by household members for themselves and each other. This can include routine housework (for example, cooking, cleaning, washing and shopping); non-routine work (for example, gardening, do-it-yourself and car maintenance); and child care which is often considered ...
Abigail Gregory, Jan Windebank
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As discussed in Chapter 1, the term ‘domestic work’ refers to the unpaid work carried out by household members for themselves and each other. This can include routine housework (for example, cooking, cleaning, washing and shopping); non-routine work (for example, gardening, do-it-yourself and car maintenance); and child care which is often considered ...
Abigail Gregory, Jan Windebank
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Work 3. Domestic work, political work, professional work
2023Depuis les années 1970, la "découverte" du travail domestique comme travail a bouleversé les analyses de nos sociétés contemporaines. Dans ce sens, l'analyse féministe du travail domestique a constitué une véritable rupture d'intelligibilité pour au moins trois sous-champs de la sociologie: la sociologie de la famille, la sociologie du travail, et la ...
Oeser, Alexandra, Simonet, Maud
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Sociological Forum, 1993
This study assesses two competing theories about the extent to which homework-paid work in the home-helps integrate work and domestic roles for men and women. Contrasting male and female homeworkers with their counterparts working outside the home, it supports some aspects of both the resource and role overload theories, but predominantly the role ...
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This study assesses two competing theories about the extent to which homework-paid work in the home-helps integrate work and domestic roles for men and women. Contrasting male and female homeworkers with their counterparts working outside the home, it supports some aspects of both the resource and role overload theories, but predominantly the role ...
openaire +1 more source
Journal of Family Issues, 2004
Using a sample of 101 heterosexual, coresidential couples, the author evaluates four housework theories: gender ideology, relative resources, time availability, and doing gender. Unlike some tests of these theories, the author operationalizes gender ideology as an identity, and the author tests the models on the traditionally feminine chores as well ...
openaire +1 more source
Using a sample of 101 heterosexual, coresidential couples, the author evaluates four housework theories: gender ideology, relative resources, time availability, and doing gender. Unlike some tests of these theories, the author operationalizes gender ideology as an identity, and the author tests the models on the traditionally feminine chores as well ...
openaire +1 more source

