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Market returns? Gender and theories of change in employment relations

Market returns? Gender and theories of change in employment relations
Market returns? Gender and theories of change in employment relations
This paper explores recent arguments about the marketization of female labour, in the context of a wider analysis of the role of concepts like 'the market' and 'individualization' in sociological accounts of change in employment relations. It will be argued that within sociology there has been a tendency for rapid, large-scale changes in employment relations to be characterized as the breakdown of social influences or structures and as the emergence of atomized, individuated market forces.
In the most recent models, change in the nature of gendered positions within employment are presented in terms of a decline of social structuring and social constraint. These emergent accounts hold similarities to classical economics, and to Marx's and Weber's accounts of employment, which also characterized new forms of employment relations in terms of the emptying of their social content and their replacement by market forms. We offer an alternative, moral economy, perspective which foregrounds the continued significance of social relations in the structuring of employment and employment change. We develop the argument through an analysis of gendered patterns of employment and change in family form.
gender, employment change, family, market, moral economy, individualization
0007-1315
261-280
Irwin, Sarah
59af2f6f-14b8-46a5-bc0e-465a4bb72064
Bottero, Wendy
2da4e792-ecef-4406-bba1-913f03dedecd
Irwin, Sarah
59af2f6f-14b8-46a5-bc0e-465a4bb72064
Bottero, Wendy
2da4e792-ecef-4406-bba1-913f03dedecd

Irwin, Sarah and Bottero, Wendy (2000) Market returns? Gender and theories of change in employment relations. British Journal of Sociology, 51 (2), 261-280. (doi:10.1080/00071310050030172).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper explores recent arguments about the marketization of female labour, in the context of a wider analysis of the role of concepts like 'the market' and 'individualization' in sociological accounts of change in employment relations. It will be argued that within sociology there has been a tendency for rapid, large-scale changes in employment relations to be characterized as the breakdown of social influences or structures and as the emergence of atomized, individuated market forces.
In the most recent models, change in the nature of gendered positions within employment are presented in terms of a decline of social structuring and social constraint. These emergent accounts hold similarities to classical economics, and to Marx's and Weber's accounts of employment, which also characterized new forms of employment relations in terms of the emptying of their social content and their replacement by market forms. We offer an alternative, moral economy, perspective which foregrounds the continued significance of social relations in the structuring of employment and employment change. We develop the argument through an analysis of gendered patterns of employment and change in family form.

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Published date: 2000
Keywords: gender, employment change, family, market, moral economy, individualization

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 33813
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/33813
ISSN: 0007-1315
PURE UUID: 0c0102c4-b6c9-44f9-87d1-dd6110d0a3c4

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Date deposited: 21 Jul 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:45

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Contributors

Author: Sarah Irwin
Author: Wendy Bottero

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