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Academic mothers perform intersected roles. They carry out their profession in workplaces, while they take the "second shift" of motherhood back to their families. The contested expectations in family and career built by the heterosexual matrix cause tension to academic mothers. We qualitatively investigate the interview data of six Chinese women academics on how they perform to negotiate their motherhood and academic work in the context of Chinese higher education, driven by the Butlerian theoretical concept of the heterosexual matrix. The findings suggest that Chinese academic mothers play a zero-sum game between being mothers and being academics, deriving from their ontological responsibilities of motherhood. We conclude that in the masculine academia, these women academics help maintain the heterosexual matrix by satisfying the gender normativity when they negotiate their performances in their family and career; meanwhile, most have developed some strategies to achieve their career advancement.; Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. (Copyright © 2022 Bao and Wang.)
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Dans le débat public sur la gestation pour autrui (GPA), parler de « travail » pour qualifier ce que font les femmes porteuses est largement perçu comme une façon de cautionner les formes de marchandisation et d’exploitation du corps des femmes à l’œuvre dans les circuits mondialisés de la bioéconomie. Contre cette interprétation qui accompagne la condamnation morale de cette pratique reproductive, en particulier dans sa version « commerciale », l’article développe une défense féministe de la conceptualisation de la GPA comme travail, appuyée sur les études ethnographiques menées auprès des femmes porteuses indiennes et nourrie théoriquement à la fois par le marxisme, par l’éthique du care et par la notion d’intersectionnalité. In fine, l’objectif est de mettre en lumière la fécondité de cette conceptualisation non seulement pour la pleine reconnaissance des femmes porteuses, mais aussi pour le diagnostic critique des divisions du travail qui structurent la société capitaliste.
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While the percentage of female students in medical schools in Pakistan is as high as 80–85 per cent, the percentage of female doctors in the medical workforce remains below 50 per cent. Our findings draw on in-depth interviews with 31 female doctors to show that the reasons behind the gap between female medical students and female medical professionals are multifold and multilayered, ranging from individual reasons to organizational and sociocultural reasons. We use an adapted version of the relational framework developed by Syed and Özbilgin in 2009 to offer a contextual and multilevel understanding of female domesticity in Pakistan. The study suggests that the problem of female doctors dropping out of the medical workforce is a reflection of the interplay of social, organizational and individual factors, which are tied together by social norms. Practical implications suggest that making hospitals and health organizations more inclusive of women and their needs could be a starting point for policymakers to address the gender gap in the medical profession. © 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd
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Since the implementation of the two‐child policy in China in 2016, it is unclear how professional women's labor force outcomes and family commitments have changed. Using interviews with 26 professional women with two children in Shanghai, we examined their work–life transitions and labor market outcomes. We found that the overarching constraints the interviewees faced included a lack of institutional childcare support, low paternal participation and increased physical and cognitive childcare labor. The women also experienced different constraining and enabling factors, leading to four types of labor market outcomes: enhancement, rebound, interruption and stagnation. Most of the interviewees who experienced career upward mobility after giving birth to a second child were urban singleton daughters who received tremendous parental support. Some participants experienced career interruption due to a lack of social support. The state should ensure family‐friendly work environments and promote paternal participation to reduce women's work–life conflict and address gender inequality.
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Although married women are increasingly participating in paid labor, housework remains their primary responsibility. This uneven distribution of housework could have a negative impact on their mental health. In this study, we examined the association between satisfaction with husbands' participation in housework and suicidal ideation in married working women. Data were obtained from 3544 participants of the fourth and fifth waves of the Korean Longitudinal Survey of Women and Families. Satisfaction with husbands' participation in housework was classified as satisfactory, less satisfactory, and dissatisfactory. A generalized estimating equations model was used to examine the association. Those who were dissatisfied with their husbands' participation in housework were 2.65 times more likely to think about suicide than those who were satisfied. Subgroup analysis showed that women with an egalitarian gender ideology or low job dissatisfaction were more likely to think about suicide when they were dissatisfied with their husbands' participation in housework. In conclusion, married working women who were dissatisfied with their husbands' participation in housework are more likely to think about suicide than those who are satisfied. Therefore, fostering an environment of fair distribution of housework is necessary for alleviating their stress from the dual burden of work and family. (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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Dans la société palestinienne, avoir un garçon dans sa descendance est un enjeu social majeur, qui dans un contexte de réduction de la fécondité, peut conduire à vouloir choisir le sexe de son enfant. Aujourd’hui, des techniques de sélection sexuelle prénatales performantes sont disponibles et ne font l’objet d’aucune couverture légale. Cet article propose d’analyser les attitudes des Palestiniennes vis-à-vis de la sélection sexuelle, lieu d’une régulation informelle au croisement du religieux, de la pression sociale et des positions personnelles des médecins. Elle crée aussi de nouveaux enjeux dans l’espace israélo-palestinien ; la réglementation et l’accès à ces pratiques sont très différents entre Israël et la Palestine.
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La circulation d’enfants entre une mère biologique et des parents adoptifs soulève des questions sur la pluralité des systèmes de genre et les inégalités sociales méconnues jusqu’ici. Nous menons une réflexion sur la situation paradoxale qui lie deux systèmes de genre : en Inde, il enjoint des femmes non mariées à renoncer à vivre leur maternité et, en Occident, il pousse les femmes avec un emploi à retarder la conception de leur premier enfant, ce qui augmente le risque de fécondabilité réduite et ouvre la voie au recours à l’adoption. Notre étude, au Tamil Nadu (Inde), parmi les mères biologiques montre que la production d’enfants adoptables relève de rapports de pouvoir très complexes.