Configurations of Care Work: Paid and Unpaid Elder Care in Italy and the Netherlands
Open Access
- 1 July 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Sociological Research Online
- Vol. 11 (2) , 25-39
- https://doi.org/10.5153/sro.1398
Abstract
Most current sociological approaches to work recognise that the same activity may be undertaken within a variety of socio-economic forms - formal or informal, linked with the private market, public state or not-for-profit sectors. This article takes care of the elderly as an exemplary case for probing some of the linkages between paid and unpaid work. We attempt to unravel the interconnections between forms of care work undertaken in different socio-economic conditions in two settings, the Netherlands and Italy. The research is part of a broader programme concerned with differing interconnections and overlaps between work activities. In this article, we are concerned with: 1) how paid and unpaid care work map on to four ‘institutional’ modes of provision - by the state, family, market, and voluntary sector; and 2) with the configurations that emerge from the combination of different forms of paid and unpaid work undertaken through the different institutions. Despite the centrality of family-based informal care by women in both countries, we argue that the overall configurations of care are in fact quite distinct. In the Netherlands, state-funded care services operate to shape and anchor the centrality of family as the main provider. In this configuration, unpaid familial labour is sustained by voluntary sector state-funded provision. In Italy, by contrast, there is significant recourse to informal market-based services in the form of individual migrant carers, in a context of limited public provision. In this configuration, the state indirectly supports market solutions, sustaining the continuity of family care as an ideal and as a practice.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Organization of Care Work in Italy: Gender and Migrant Labor in the New EconomyIndiana Journal of Global Legal Studies, 2006
- The adult worker model family, gender equality and care: the search for new policy principles and the possibilities and problems of a capabilities approachEconomy and Society, 2005
- Culture and Welfare State Policies: Reflections on a Complex InterrelationJournal of Social Policy, 2004
- Comparing Care Regimes in EuropeFeminist Economics, 2004
- Three worlds of welfare capitalism or more? A state-of-the-art reportJournal of European Social Policy, 2002
- Care as a Good for Social PolicyJournal of Social Policy, 2002
- Three Worlds of Welfare State ResearchComparative Political Studies, 2000
- European Social Care Services: Is It Possible To Identify Models ?Journal of European Social Policy, 1996
- Why ‘Work’? Gender and the ‘Total Social Organization of Labour’Gender, Work & Organization, 1995
- Gender, Cash and Informal Care: European Perspectives and DilemmasJournal of Social Policy, 1995