The Gendering of Inequalities: Women, men and work. hardcover 280 p.
内容
目次
Introduction: a comparative perspective on work and gender, Jane jenson;an overview of the major issues, Margaret Maruani. Part 1 Categoricalmessages - thinking and rethinking gender relations: introduction -intersections - gender categories in space and time, Jane Jenson; time andwomen's work - historical periodizations, Delphine Gardey; where have theybeen working and what have they been doing? - historical perspectives onworking women, Sylvie Schweitzer; immigrant women and their daughters -intersections of race, class and gender, Francoise Gaspard; the sexualdivision of labour re-examined, Helena Hirata and Daniele Kergoat;resignifying the worker - gender and flexibility, Sylvia Walby. Part 2 Beprepared - education, training and skilling: introduction - variations onwomen's and men's occupations, marlaine Cacouault; a hidden curriculum? -coeducation and gender identity, Annick Durand-Delvigne and MarieDuru-Bellat; the social construction of skill, Anne Marie Daune-Richard;secretarial work and technological change, Philippe Alonzo and OlivierLiaroutzos; the French and German educational models and their consequencesfor women, Catherine Marry. Part 3 Women's relationship to labour markets -more and more precarious?: introduction - (wo)man-handled by the labourmarket, Chantal Rogerat; the enduring wage gap - a Europe-wode comparison,Rachel Silvera; part-time work - challenging the "breadwinner" gendercontract?, Colette Fagan, Jacqueline O'Reilly and Jill Rubery; femaleunemployment in France and the rest of Europe, Annie Gauvin; moving towardsthe American model? - women and unemployment in Great Britain, ArianeHegewisch; when exclusion is socially acceptable, the case of Spain, TeresaTorns: part 4 Public policy - promoting equality or engendering newinequalities?: introduction - public sphere, private sphere - the issue ofwomen's rights, Jacqueline Laufer; equality at work - what difference doeslegislating make?, Marie-Therese Lanquetin; European policies promoting moreflexible labour forces, Daniele Meulders; family policy and the labour marketin European welfare states, Jane Lewis; France's new service sector and thefamily, Michel Lallement; democracy confronts the new domestic services,Genevieve Fraisse; rethinking time - there is more to life than working time,Maria-Carmen Belloni, Jean-Yves Boulin and Annie Junter-Loiseau. Conclusion:the future remains open, Christian Baudelot.