El trabajo familiar de cuidado en el marco del estado de bienestarpresentación

  1. Flaquer Vilardebò, Lluís
  2. Pfau-Effinger, Birgit
  3. Artiaga Leiras, Alba
Revista:
Cuadernos de relaciones laborales

ISSN: 1131-8635 1988-2572

Año de publicación: 2014

Volumen: 32

Número: 1

Páginas: 11-32

Tipo: Artículo

DOI: 10.5209/REV_CRLA.2014.V32.N1.44712 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openAcceso abierto editor

Otras publicaciones en: Cuadernos de relaciones laborales

Referencias bibliográficas

  • Albertini, M. and Kohli, M. (2013). The Generational Contract in the Family: An Analysis of Transfer Regimes in Europe. European Sociological Review, Vol. 29, Núm. 4, 828-840.
  • Anttonen, A. and Sipilä, J. (2005). Comparative approaches to social care: Diversity in care production modes. In: Pfau-Effinger, Birgit & Geissler, Birgit (eds). Care Arrangements in Europe – Variations and Change, Bristol: Policy Press.
  • Anttonen, A., Baldock, J. & Sipilä, Jorma (eds). (2003). The Young, the Old and the State. Social Care in Five Industrial Nations. Cheltenham: Edwar Elgar.
  • Bettio, F. & Plantenga, J. (2004). Comparing Care Regimes in Europe. Feminist Economics, Vol. 10, Núm. 1, 85-113.
  • Brandt, M; Haberkern, K.; and Szydlik, M. (2009). Intergenerational Help and Care in Europe. European Sociological Review, Vol. 25, Núm. 5, 585-601.
  • Da Roit, B. and Le Bihan, B. (2011). Cash for Care Schemes and the Changing Role of Informal Caregivers in France and Italy. In B. Pfau-Effinger and T. Rostgaard (eds.) Care between Work and Welfare in European Societies. (pp. 177-203).London: Palgrave..
  • Daly, M. and Lewis, J. (1998). Introduction: Conceptualising Social Care in the Context of Welfare State Restructuring. In J. Lewis (eds.) Gender, Social Care and Welfare State Restructuring in Europe. (pp.1-24)..Aldershot: Ashgate.
  • Daly, M. and Lewis, J. (2000). The concept of social care and the analysis of contemporary welfare states. British Journal of Sociology, Vol. 51, Núm. 2, 281–298.
  • Daly, M. (2002). Care as a Good for Social Policy. Journal of Social Policy, Vol. 31, Núm. 2, 251-270.
  • Ehrenreich, B. and A. R. Hochschild (eds). (2004). Global woman: Nannies, maids and sex workers in the new economy. New York: Henry Holt and Company.
  • Eichler, M. and Pfau-Effinger, B. (2009). The “consumer principle” in the care of elderly people- free choice and actual choice in the German welfare state. Social Policy and Administration, Vol. 43, Núm. 6, 617-644.
  • England, P. (2005). Emerging Theories of Care Work. Annual Review of Sociology. 31, 381-399.
  • Escobedo, A. (2009). Leave policies and public systems of care for children under three years old and their families in the European Union. Tesis doctoral con mención europea. Departamento de Sociología. Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociología, Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona.
  • Escobedo, A., Flaquer, L. and Navarro, L. (2012). The Social Politics of Fatherhood in Spain and France: A Comparative Analysis of Parental Leave and Shared Residence. Ethnologie Française, Vol. 42, Núm. 1, 117-126.
  • Esping-Andersen, G. (1999). Social Foundations of Postindustrial Economies. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • European Commission (2013). Barcelona objectives: The development of childcare facilities for young children in Europe with a view to sustainable and inclusive growth. Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union.
  • Eydal, G. (2005). Childcare policies of the Nordic welfare states: Differernt paths to enable parents to earn and care. In B. Pfau-Effinger and B. Geissler (eds). Care and Social integration in Europe. (pp. 153-172). Bristol: Policy Press..
  • Ferrera, M. (1996) The ‘Southern Model’ of Welfare in Social Europe. Journal of European Social Policy, Vol. 6, Núm. 1, 17-37.
  • Flaquer, L. (2000). Is there a Southern European model of family policy? In A. Pfenning and T. Bahle (eds.) Families and Family Policies in Europe. Comparative Perspectives. (pp. 15-33). Frankfurt a.m./New York: Peter Lang,
  • Flaquer, L. (2013a). Family-related factors influencing child well-being. In Asher BenArieh, Ferran Casas, Ivar Frønes, and Jill E. Korbin (eds.) Handbook of Child Wellbeing. (pp. 2,229-2,255). Dordrecht: Springer. Vol.. 4.
  • Flaquer, L. (2013b). Los trabajos de cuidado: De una obligación tradicional a un derecho social. En Carol Gilligan La ética del cuidado. (pp. 72-85). Barcelona: Fundació Víctor Grífols i Lucas
  • Flaquer, L. and Escobedo, A. (2009). The Metamorphosis of Informal Work in Spain: Family Solidarity, Female Immigration and Development of Social Rights. In B. Pfau-Effinger; L. Flaquer and P. H. Jensen. (eds.) Formal and Informal Work: The Hidden Work Regime in Europe. (pp. 143-168). New York: Routledge.
  • Gal, J. (2010). Is there an extended family of welfare states? Journal of European Social Policy, Vol. 20, Núm. 4, 283-300.
  • Geissler, B. and Pfau-Effinger, B. (2005). Change of European care arrangements. In B. Pfau-Effinger and B. Geissler (eds.) Care Arrangements in Europe – Variations and Change. Bristol: Policy Press.
  • Guillén, A. M. and León, M. (2011). Introduction. In A. M. Guillén and M. León (eds) The Spanish Welfare State in European Context. (pp. 1-14). Farnham, England and Burlington, USA: Ashgate.
  • Hochschild, A.R. (2008). La mercantilización de la vida íntima. Apuntes de la casa y el trabajo. Buenos Aires: Katz Editores..
  • Ibáñez, Z. (2011). Part-time Employment in Spain: A Victyim of the ‘Temporality Culture´ and a Lagging Implementation. In A. M. Guillén and M. León (eds.) The Spanish Welfare State in European Context. (pp. 165-185). Farnham, England and Burlington, USA: Ashgate..
  • Kröger, T. and Sipilä, J. (eds.) (2005). Overstretched: European Families Up Against the Demands of Work and Care. Malden: Blackwell.
  • Lapuerta, I., Baizán, P. and González, M. J. (2011). ‘Individual and Institutional Constraints: an Analysis of Parental Leave Use and Duration in Spain.’ Population Research and Policy Review. Vol. 30, Núm. 2, 185-210.
  • Leibfried, S. (1992). Towards a European Welfare State: On Integrating Poverty Regimes into the European Community. In Z. Ferge and J. E. Kolberg (eds.) Social Policy in a Changing Europe, Frankfurt am Main and Boulder, Colorado: Campus Verlag-Westview Press. (pp. 245-279).
  • Léon, M. (2013). Italy and Spain: Still the case of familialistic welfare models? Population Review. Vol. 52, Num. 1, 25-42.
  • Lewis, J., Knijn, T. Martin, C. & Ostner, I. (2008). Patterns of Development in Work/Family Reconciliation Policies for Parents in France, Germany, the Netherlands, and the UK in the 2000s. Social Politics. Vol. 15, Núm. 3, 261-286.
  • Marí-Klose, P. and Moreno-Fuentes, F. J. (2013). The Southern European Welfare Model in the Post-industrial Order: Still a Distinctive Cluster? European Societies. Vol. 15, Núm. 4, 475-492.
  • Montero, J. M. (2011). El comportamiento de la tasa de actividad durante la última fase recesiva. Boletín Económico. abril. Madrid: Banco de España. (pp. 89-97).
  • Moreno Mínguez, A. (2010). Family and Gender Roles in Spain from a Comparative Perspective. European Societies. Vol. 12, Núm.1, 85-111.
  • Moreno Mínguez, A. (2012). Familia, empleo femenino y reproducción en España. Papers. Revista de sociologia. Vol. 97, Núm. 2, 461-495.
  • Moreno, L. and Marí-Klose, P. (2013). ‘Youth, Family Change and Welfare Arrangements: Is the South still so Different?’ European Societies. Vol. 15, Núm. 4, 493-513.
  • Moss P. (ed) (2012). International Review of Leave Policies and Related Research 2012. accessible at the website of the expert network on Leave Policies and Research: http://www.leavenetwork.org
  • Naldini, M. (2003). The Family in the Mediterranean Welfare States. London & Portland Or.: Frank Cass.
  • Och, R., Pfau-Effinger, B. and Frericks, P. (2013). Pflegepolitiken im internationalen Vergleich (Comparative Analysis of Care Policies). In M. Löw (Ed.), Vielfalt und Zusammenhalt. 36. Kongress der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Soziologie (Proceedings oft he 36. Congress for Sociology of the DGS), Frankfurt am Main: Campus.
  • Pavolini, E. und Ranci, E. (2008). Restructuring the welfare state: reforms in long-term care in Western European countries, Journal of European Social Policy. Vol. 18, Núm. 3, 246–59.
  • Pfau-Effinger, B. (1998). Gender cultures and the gender arrangement - a theoretical framework for cross-national comparisons on gender. Innovation: the European Journal of Social Sciences. Vol. 11, Núm. 2, 147-166.
  • Pfau-Effinger, B. (2004a). Culture, Welfare State and Women’s Employment in European Societies, Aldershot: Ashgate.
  • Pfau-Effinger, B. (2004). Historical paths of the male breadwinner family model – explanation for cross-national differences. British Journal of Sociology. Vol. 55, Núm. 3, 377-399.
  • Pfau-Effinger, B. (2005). Welfare State Policies and the Development of Care Arrangements. European Societies. Vol. 7, Núm. 2, 321-347.
  • Pfau-Effinger, B. (2009). The approach of the ’Arrangement of work and welfare’ to the Cross-National Analysis of Formal and Informal Work. In B. Pfau-Effinger; L. Flaquer; & P. H. Jensen. (eds.) Formal and Informal Work. The Hidden Work Regime in Europe. (pp. 21-35). New York: Routledge.
  • Pfau-Effinger, Birgit (2012) Women's employment in institutional and cultural context, International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy. Vol. 32, Núm. 9, 530-543.
  • Pfau-Effinger, B.; Jensen, P. H.; Flaquer, L. (2009). Formal and informal work in European societies: A comparative perspective’. In B. Pfau-Effinger; L. Flaquer & P. H. Jensen (eds.) Formal and Informal Work: The Hidden Work Regime in Europe. (pp. 193-213). New York: Routledge.
  • Pfau-Effinger, B.; Flaquer, L. & P. H. Jensen (2009) (eds.) Formal and Informal Work: the Hidden Work Regime in Europe. (pp. 193-213). New York: Routledge.
  • Salazar Parreñas, R. (2001). Servants of Globalization: Women, Migration and Domestic Work. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Saraceno, C. (1994). The Ambivalent Familism of the Italian Welfare State. Social Politics Spring: 60–82.
  • Sarasa, S. (2011). Long-term Care: The Persistence of Familialism. In A. M. Guillén and M. León (eds) The Spanish Welfare State in European Context. (pp. 237-257). Farnham, England and Burlington, USA: Ashgate.
  • Sarasa, S. (2013). L’impacte social de la crisis a l’Àrea Metropolitana de Barcelona i a Catalunya. Papers 56. Barcelona: IERMB.
  • Saxonberg, S.; Sirovatka, T. (2006). Seeking the Balance Between Work and Family After Communism. Marriage and Family Review. Vol. 39, Núm. 314, 287-313.
  • Schäfer, A., Tucci, I.and Gottschall, K. (2012). Top down or bottom up? A crossnational study of vertical occupational sex segregation in twelve european countries, In F. Engelstad and M. Teigen (eds.), Firms, Boards, and Gender Quotas. Comparative Social Research, Comparative Social Research/29, Bingley: Emerald.
  • Szebehely, M. (2005), Äldreomsorger i Norden – verksamhet, forskning och statistik”, in Szebehely, M. (ed) Äldreomsorgsforskning i Norden. En kunnskapsöversigt. Copenhagen: Nordic Council of Ministers.
  • Theobald, H. (2005). ‘Labour market participation of women and social exclusion: Contradictory processes of care employment in Sweden and Germany’. In PfauEffinger, B.; Geissler, B. (eds.) Care Arrangements in Europe – Variations and Change. Bristol: Policy Press.
  • Thomas, C. (2011). Deconstruyendo los conceptos de cuidados, en Carrasco, C., Borderías, C. y Torns, T. (eds.). El trabajo de cuidados. Historia, teoría y políticas. (pp. 145-177). La Catarata. Madrid.
  • Ungerson, C. (2004). Whose Empowerment and Independence? A cross-national perspective on “cash for care” schemes. Ageing & Society. Vol. 24, Núm. 2, 189-212.
  • Wall, K., and A. Escobedo, A. (2009). ‘Portugal and Spain: Two pathways in Southern Europe’. In S. B. Kamerman and P. Moss (eds) The politics of parental leave policies: Children, parenting, gender and the labour market. ( pp. 207-226). Bristol. The Policy Press