"The Long Arm of the Household": gendered struggles in combining paid work with social and civil participation over the lifecourse
"The Long Arm of the Household": gendered struggles in combining paid work with social and civil participation over the lifecourse
Successfully combining paid work and various forms of social and civil participation is commonly assumed to be beneficial to both individuals and society. However, integrating these aspects can be difficult, partly because they can be connected through relationships that operate in opposing directions. Combining paid work and participation over the long-term can be especially challenging, as the factors informing each continuously evolve. This balancing act may be particularly difficult for women who, relative to men, often manage greater caring responsibilities alongside work. To build understanding of these matters, we weave together the participation and work-related content of the UK’s National Child Development Study and the associated 2008 Social Participation and Identity Study. We unpack a bidirectional relationship between these items and highlight the importance of household dynamics and gender. Paid work’s flexibility, autonomy, predictability and intensity also emerge as important elements in achieving a sustainable work-participation balance.
NCDS, civil participation, gender, paid work, social participation
Parry, Jane
c7061194-16cb-434e-bf05-914623cfcc63
Brookfield, Katherine
90c2a413-4469-4aad-bdc0-b87bff805a86
Bolton, Vicki
2d08041f-7eae-4b6f-ba0a-a19acebc02b3
Parry, Jane
c7061194-16cb-434e-bf05-914623cfcc63
Brookfield, Katherine
90c2a413-4469-4aad-bdc0-b87bff805a86
Bolton, Vicki
2d08041f-7eae-4b6f-ba0a-a19acebc02b3
Parry, Jane, Brookfield, Katherine and Bolton, Vicki
(2020)
"The Long Arm of the Household": gendered struggles in combining paid work with social and civil participation over the lifecourse.
Gender, Work & Organization, 0, [gwao.12569].
(doi:10.1111/gwao.12569).
Abstract
Successfully combining paid work and various forms of social and civil participation is commonly assumed to be beneficial to both individuals and society. However, integrating these aspects can be difficult, partly because they can be connected through relationships that operate in opposing directions. Combining paid work and participation over the long-term can be especially challenging, as the factors informing each continuously evolve. This balancing act may be particularly difficult for women who, relative to men, often manage greater caring responsibilities alongside work. To build understanding of these matters, we weave together the participation and work-related content of the UK’s National Child Development Study and the associated 2008 Social Participation and Identity Study. We unpack a bidirectional relationship between these items and highlight the importance of household dynamics and gender. Paid work’s flexibility, autonomy, predictability and intensity also emerge as important elements in achieving a sustainable work-participation balance.
Text
Long Arm 15.06.2020 with authors
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Submitted date: 2019
Accepted/In Press date: 13 October 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 October 2020
Keywords:
NCDS, civil participation, gender, paid work, social participation
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 445006
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/445006
ISSN: 0968-6673
PURE UUID: 84950f6d-3caa-4d77-b9c7-3940c25bbf03
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 17 Nov 2020 17:40
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 05:15
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Katherine Brookfield
Author:
Vicki Bolton
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics