2018
DOI: 10.1017/s0144686x18001435
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Re-conceptualising the relationship between de-familialisation and familialisation and the implications for gender equality – the case of long-term care policies for older people

Abstract: This article explores how far the concepts of de-familialisation/familialisation are adequate to the classification of long-term care (LTC) policies for older people. In the theoretical debate over LTC policies, de-familialising and familialising policies are often treated as opposites. We propose re-conceptualising the relation between de-familialisation and familialisation, arguing that they represent substantially different types of policy that, in theory, can vary relatively autonomously. In order to evalu… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…These analyses establish the broad contours of change yet place little emphasis on care policy implementation or how ground-level implementing actors interpret such changes. As home care policy implementation can reinforce and/or relieve familial and especially women's responsibilities for care, ideas about marketizing home care have relevance for challenging or reproducing dominant gendered ideas of care (Eggers, Grages, Pfau-Effinger, & Och, 2018). In this research, I draw on ideational and gender discursive approaches to examine how implementing actors discursively engage with the marketization of home care policy in Ireland.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These analyses establish the broad contours of change yet place little emphasis on care policy implementation or how ground-level implementing actors interpret such changes. As home care policy implementation can reinforce and/or relieve familial and especially women's responsibilities for care, ideas about marketizing home care have relevance for challenging or reproducing dominant gendered ideas of care (Eggers, Grages, Pfau-Effinger, & Och, 2018). In this research, I draw on ideational and gender discursive approaches to examine how implementing actors discursively engage with the marketization of home care policy in Ireland.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the perspectives and experiences of relatives who hire these women are barely addressed in the literature. These family members are one of the great pillars on which this system of care is based [19,29,30,53], which is in accordance with the family values of the older person who is being cared for at his/her own residence [13,33,47,54].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…However, the inadequacy of the government to respond is forcing families to solve the problem. Thus, emancipated women hire other women, migrants, as a solution to the global shortage of means for long-term care [5,[17][18][19][20].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most importantly, a number of scholars have pointed out that familization and defamilization should not be framed as negatives or as opposite poles on a continuous scale (Eggers, Grages, Pfau-Effinger, & Och, 2020;Leitner, 2003;Lohmann, 2009;Lohmann & Zagel, 2016), but may be regarded as two related but distinct concepts. The fact that a number of welfare states combine familizing and defamilizing policies shows that the two are not mutually exclusive (e.g., in the form of optional individualism or optional familialism; Leitner, 2003;Lohmann & Zagel, 2016).…”
Section: Defamilizationmentioning
confidence: 99%