Bibliographie complète
Gender in the flesh: Allostatic load as the embodiment of stressful, gendered work in Canadian police communicators
Type de ressource
Auteurs/contributeurs
- Birze, Arija (Auteur)
- Paradis, Elise (Auteur)
- Regehr, Cheryl (Auteur)
- LeBlanc, Vicki (Auteur)
- Einstein, Gillian (Auteur)
Titre
Gender in the flesh: Allostatic load as the embodiment of stressful, gendered work in Canadian police communicators
Résumé
Gender and work are important social determinants of health, yet studies of health inequities related to the gendered and emotional intricacies of work are rare. Occupations high in emotional labour – a known job stressor – are associated with ill-health and typically dominated by women. Little is known about the mechanisms linking health with these emotional components of work. Using physiological and questionnaire data from Canadian police communicators, we adopt an embodied approach to understanding the relationship between gender norm conformity, emotional labour, and physiological dysregulation, or allostatic load. For high conformers, emotional labour leaves gendered traces in the flesh via increased allostatic load, suggesting that in this way, gendered structures in the workplace become embodied, influencing health through conformity to gender and emotion norms. Findings also reveal that dichotomous conceptions of gender may mask the impact of gendered structures, obscuring the consequences of gender for work-related stress.
Publication
Work, Employment and Society
Volume
37
Numéro
5
Pages
1299-1320
Date
2023
Langue
Anglais
ISSN
0950-0170, 1469-8722
Titre abrégé
Gender in the Flesh
Extra
Number: 5
Référence
Birze, Arija, Paradis, Elise, Regehr, Cheryl, LeBlanc, Vicki et Einstein, Gillian. (2023). Gender in the flesh: Allostatic load as the embodiment of stressful, gendered work in Canadian police communicators. Work, Employment and Society, 37(5), 1299‑1320. https://doi.org/10.1177/09500170221080388
Régions géographiques
Thématiques
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