“…In addition to the health implications of Covid‐19 infection, the pandemic has had adverse effects on three crucial domains—employment, income, and education (Acevedo et al, 2021; Adams‐Prassl et al, 2020; Alon et al, 2020; Bundervoet et al, 2022; Bustamante et al, 2022; Crossley et al, 2021; Egger et al, 2021; Maurizio, 2021), all of which intersect with gendered work trajectories. Notably, the pandemic has differed significantly from previous global recessions in its disproportionate repercussions on women's employment, attributed primarily to their higher representation in occupations reliant on in‐person and face‐to‐face interactions and their significant responsibilities in domestic and caregiving roles within households (Bettin et al, 2023; Kühhirt & Ludwig, 2012). Moreover, Latin America and the Caribbean, confronted with specific socioeconomic challenges and insufficient social security support for families, have experienced substantially more severe repercussions on women's employability within the context of developing economies during the pandemic (ILO, 2022a).…”