ABSTRACT

First published in 2002. Social critics, policy makers, and the public in general frequently overlook the crucial status of women as the main recipients of welfare and as providers of paid and unpaid care. The eight original essays in this collection remedy this situation. By comparing welfare policy in advanced industrial countries and the welfare experiences of different populations of women--black or white, young and old--with that of the male experience, Sylvia Bashevkin and her contributors challenge the Moynihan report; the conservative fatherhood movement; and neoliberal philosophy, politics and practice. Women's Work is Never Done adds a new dimension to the important public discussion of women's status as citizens, disparities in welfare reform, and poverty in a globalized world.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part |25 pages

Conceptual Issues

part |46 pages

Confronting Women's Diversity

chapter 2|26 pages

It's No Longer Just about Race

Social Constructions of American Citizenship in the Moynihan Report

chapter 3|18 pages

Paying for Caring

The Gendering Consequences of European Care Allowances for the Frail Elderly

part |55 pages

Anglo-American Welfare Reform

chapter 5|27 pages

Road-Testing the Third Way

Single Mothers and Welfare Reform during the Clinton, Chrétien, and Blair Years

part |59 pages

Policy Alternatives

chapter 6|22 pages

Violating Women

Rights Abuses in the American Welfare Police State

chapter 7|35 pages

Mandatory “Marriage” or Obligatory Waged Work

Social Assistance and Single Mothers in Wisconsin and Ontario