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“The workload is staggering”: Changing working conditions of stay-at-home mothers under COVID-19 lockdowns

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Type de ressource
Article de revue
Auteurs/contributeurs
  • Aslam, Awish (Auteur)
  • Adams, Tracey L. (Auteur)
Titre
“The workload is staggering”: Changing working conditions of stay-at-home mothers under COVID-19 lockdowns
Résumé
The COVID-19 pandemic has drawn attention to the home as a work environment, but the focus has centered on the experiences of paid workers. Stay-at-home mothers (SAHMs), for whom the home was already a workplace, have received little attention. This article explores how pandemic-induced lockdowns impacted SAHMs' working conditions and their experiences of childrearing. Combining a Marxist-feminist conceptualization of domestic labor with a labor process framework, we performed a qualitative content analysis of vignettes SAHMs shared about their day-to-day domestic labor in an online mothering community. Our findings show that, under lockdown conditions, the primacy given to partners' paid work combined with children's increased demands for care and attention reduced SAHMs work autonomy and exacerbated gender inequalities in the home. Combining labor process theory with literature on motherwork illuminates the home as a gendered work environment and enhances understanding of how changing conditions of domestic labor can intensify gender inequalities (and workers' awareness of them) that typically remain “hidden in the household.”. © 2022 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Publication
Gender, Work and Organization
Volume
29
Numéro
6
Pages
1764-1778
Date
2022
Langue
Anglais
DOI
10.1111/gwao.12870
URL
https://uqam-bib.on.worldcat.org/oclc/10422886831
Référence
Aslam, Awish et Adams, Tracey L. (2022). “The workload is staggering”: Changing working conditions of stay-at-home mothers under COVID-19 lockdowns. Gender, Work and Organization, 29(6), 1764‑1778. https://doi.org/10.1111/gwao.12870
Approches et analyses
  • Féminisme matérialiste
  • Systèmes d'oppressions
    • Inégalités
    • Sexisme
Discipline
  • Sciences humaines
    • Sociologie
Périodes historiques
  • 2000 à aujourd'hui
    • 2020-2029
Thématiques
  • Care
  • Maternité
  • Travail
Lien vers cette notice
https://bibliographies.uqam.ca/bibliofem/bibliographie/LRX774JN
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