The Neglect of Care-Giving
In: Challenge: the magazine of economic affairs, Band 41, Heft 5, S. 45-58
ISSN: 1558-1489
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In: Challenge: the magazine of economic affairs, Band 41, Heft 5, S. 45-58
ISSN: 1558-1489
In: Journal of family strengths, Band 4, Heft 1
ISSN: 2168-670X
1. Introduction : "where do the children play?" -- 2. "We are here alone" : the hiring decision in the struggle for family resettlement -- 3. "We need each other" : childcare as a paid and fulfilling activity -- 4. "Everything for us but nothing with us" : the meaning of motherhood, delegation of care work and its consequences -- 5. "From nanny to granny" : caring as kinning -- 6. "Europe is my brain, Asia is my heart" : GrandMotherland and kinning as home-bonding -- 7. Conclusion : mutual dependency, emotionality, and kinship ties in care-giving.
"Many scholars see caregiving relationships as being based on mutual dependency or interdependency. Extensively cited notions of the 'global care chain' or 'international division of reproductive labour' have prepared the ground for analysis of global interdependencies in several domains. This book goes further by taking mutual dependency as a starting point for analysing all relationships. Using the example of Vietnamese families in the Czech Republic and the Czech native nannies, it shows how paid caregiving is contextualized in terms of various relationships between three types of actors: employer-employee, caring for the child, and mother-child. All of these ties are based on ontologically different principles and each of them operates as a piece of a puzzle, which is meaningful only in relation to each other."--
In: Routledge
In: Routledge/Asian Studies Association of Australia (ASAA) East Asian Ser
With rapid economic progress and increasing life expectancy in East Asian societies, more attention is being paid by their governments, the media and the academy to mental illness and dementia. While clinical research on mental illness and dementia in Chinese societies acknowledges the importance of culture in shaping people's experiences of these illnesses, how Chinese culture shapes people's understandings of and responses to mental illness and dementia has yet to be interrogated to any depth. Mental Illness, Dementia and Family in China breaks new ground in exploring how Ch
In: Prevention in human services, Band 9, Heft 1, S. 99-108
ISSN: 2374-877X
In: Prevention in human services, Band 9, Heft 1, S. 99-108
ISSN: 0270-3114
The purpose of this research is to address the lack of a region-wide view of widow discrimination in India, the home of 42 million widows. This study analyzed the household data collected in face-to-face interviews from January to March of 2011 in six major Indian cities including Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, Chennai, Kolkata, and Hyderabad. It was revealed that widow discrimination does not prevail across the nation. That is, this research did not deny the existence of traditional widow discrimination in some areas, but demonstrated that this phenomenon does not represent the whole nation if we focus on the widow's old age and the treatment by their family. Certainly, this research has some limitations, including the fact that the observations came only from cities. However, this is pioneering research, and more significantly, it addresses the lack of a region-wide view analysis of widow discrimination in India with an aging population.
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In: ISER Discussion Paper No. 858
SSRN
Working paper
In: Journal of women & aging: the multidisciplinary quarterly of psychosocial practice, theory, and research, Band 5, Heft 2, S. 99-114
ISSN: 1540-7322
In: ZEF-Discussion Papers on Development Policy No. 249
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Working paper
In: FRB of Chicago Working Paper No. 2023-14
SSRN
In: University of Tübingen Working Papers in Economics and Finance No. 104
We weave together care-giving, gender, and migration. We hypothesize that daughters who are mothers have a stronger incentive than sons who are fathers to demonstrate to their children the appropriate way of caring for one's parents. The reason underlying this hypothesis is that women on average live longer than men, they tend to marry men who are older than they are and, thus, they are more likely than men to spend their last years without a spouse. Because it is more effective and less costly to care for parents if they live nearby, daughters with children do not move as far away from the parental home as sons with children or childless offspring. Data on the distance between the children's location and the parents' location extracted from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE), in conjunction with data on selected demographic characteristics and institutional indicators taken from Eurostat, the OECD, and the World Bank, lend support to our hypothesis: compared to childless daughters, childless sons, and sons who are fathers, daughters who are mothers choose to live closer to their parents' home.
Demographic changes are placing increasing emphasis in Nordic and other countries on the provision of care for elderly and other people in their homes. In this paper, the possibilities for a group of home helpers to act as mediators for the needs of assistees is discussed within a context of the changing information technological regimes of the local government.
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