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It Depends Who You Meet': The One-Child Family and Linked Life Paths
In: Sociologický časopis: Czech sociological review, Band 56, Heft 2, S. 165-195
ISSN: 2336-128X
The Framing of Abortion in the Czech Republic: How the Continuity of Discourse Prevents Institutional Change
In: Sociologický časopis: Czech sociological review, Band 46, Heft 6, S. 945-976
ISSN: 2336-128X
Work as a Solution? Livelihood Strategies of Lone Mothers in the Czech Republic
In: Sociologický časopis: Czech sociological review, Band 45, Heft 4, S. 753-784
ISSN: 2336-128X
Recenze: Ellingsaeter, A. L.; Leira, A. (eds.): Politicising Parenthood in Scandinavia. Gender Relations in Welfare States
In: Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review, Band 45, Heft 1, S. 208-211
Práce jako řešení? Strategie obživy osamělých matek v ČR
In: Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review, Band 45, Heft 4
When examining the gender of institutions of parenthood, lone motherhood is a key issue. In this article the author focuses on the economic implications of lone motherhood and on the strategies that women living with children without a partner develop in order to ensure their livelihood. The author begins by presenting the theoretical background and some results from European and North American research on lone motherhood. She then provides an overview of research on lone parenthood done in the Czech Republic since 1959. Finally, the author describes the qualitative study she conducted on divorced mothers. The results show how women deal economically with marital separation and which livelihood strategies they opt for. The research methodology was based on constructivist grounded theory and the technique of interviews. From the research results the author distinguishes fi ve basic strategies that can be combined and that are based on the sources that women have at their disposal. Those strategies may differ in terms of their degree of success, dependence/independence on others, and their efficacy at different points in time. The results also indicate that the success of these working strategies depends mainly on the age of the youngest child in the family and the caring responsibilities required by that age. The author argues that while for some women heading one-parent families paid work is an option that allows them to obtain a certain degree of independence and self-confidence, its efficacy depends on the context and immediate conditions in which the women find themselves. Overstressing the employment of lone mothers as a universal solution may thus lead to new dependencies.
Old Obligations in the Modern World: The Father as Provider before and after Divorce
In: Sociologický časopis: Czech sociological review, Band 42, Heft 3, S. 573-590
ISSN: 2336-128X
'I Have to Act Like Everything's Okay': Menstruation, the Female Body, and the World of Work Organisations
In: Gender a výzkum
ISSN: 2570-6586
Czech Parents Under Lockdown: Different Positions, Different Temporalities
In: Sociological research online, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 184-203
ISSN: 1360-7804
Using an intersectional approach, we explore how parents in the Czech Republic coped with the increased demands of childcare and how their perceptions of childcare changed throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. Building on Nancy Fraser's theory of the social contradiction of capitalism, we address the question of whether the pandemic situation can be viewed as an opportunity to increase recognition of care. Qualitative interviews with parents from various socioeconomic backgrounds conducted from spring 2020 to summer 2021 demonstrate ambivalent experiences of care during the COVID-19 pandemic. The first school closure in spring 2020 was perceived as a rather positive interruption to everyday affairs. As the pandemic became protracted, the long-term negative effects of care under lockdown arose, especially among mothers, which included weakening labour market position, deteriorating economic situation, and growing dependence on a male breadwinner or social welfare. Our research shows the temporality of the COVID-19 care crisis. In the first stage of the pandemic, care was (also) assessed as an opportunity, a source of purpose, and a new value. In the next period, the experiences and expectations were rather negative. Over time, gender inequality at home increased as women took on most of the increased care burden and the social inequalities deepened, with some using their resources to compensate for the risks associated with the care crisis and others facing further exhaustion and income losses. Overall, parental care did not win greater societal recognition during the pandemic.
Selective pronatalism in childcare and reproductive health policies in Czechoslovakia
In: The history of the family: an international quarterly, Band 25, Heft 4, S. 627-648
ISSN: 1081-602X
Institutions and Discourses on Childcare for Children Under the Age of Three in a Comparative French-Czech Perspective
In: Sociological research online, Band 22, Heft 3, S. 120-142
ISSN: 1360-7804
The article compares the development of policies pertaining to care for preschool children in the course of the second half of the 20th century in France and in the Czech Republic. It aims at identifying the key factors that led to the differentiation of the policies and institutions in the two countries, especially with respect to support for extra-familial care and formal care institutions (nurseries). We build on the theories of 'new' institutionalisms and we apply framing analysis, which allows us to understand the formation of ideas that precede policy changes. Specifically, we discuss the role of expert discourse and the framings of care for young children in the process of social policy change. We argue that expert knowledge in interaction with the political, economic, and demographic contexts and how it has been presented in public have had a fundamental impact on the formation of childcare policies and institutions in the two countries.
The Conditions of Parenthood in Organisations: An International Comparison
In: Sociologický časopis: Czech sociological review, Band 45, Heft 3, S. 519-548
ISSN: 2336-128X
The Conditions of Parenthood in Organisations: An International Comparison
In: Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review, Band 45, Heft 3
The paper focuses on organisations and the conditions for working parents in terms of combining work and care and how those conditions are set up and negotiated in organisations. The research draws on three case studies comparing pairs of companies active in the Czech Republic and in one of the following countries – Germany, France, and Sweden – in the field of engineering. The goal is to explore in depth the conditions that Czech working parents are faced with and that derive from the organisational processes and means and dynamics of negotiating conditions for working parents, and to compare them with the conditions in other countries and identify the sources of variability of these conditions. Important differences between a company's family-friendly practices in its home country and in its Czech branches are primarily determined by the differences in the way in which welfare regimes are set up in individual countries. In addition, the authors identify the following five main interlinked factors explaining the variability of family-friendly policies and practices in organisations: parental (maternity) ideologies, the organisational culture of non-discrimination and equal opportunities, the actors' activity in work relations, the role of trade unions in negotiations, and the given organisation's experience with employees-parents.
Vlastní cestou?: životní dráhy v pozdně moderní společnosti
In: Edice Studie 112. svazek