2022
DOI: 10.1111/ijsw.12576
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The puzzles of daily life: The temporal orders of families when parents have non‐standard work schedules

Abstract: This article investigates the temporal orders of families as the daily rhythms and schedules when one or both parents work non-standard hours. Our focus is especially on the often asynchronous times of non-standard work, on one hand, and of early childhood education and care (ECEC) services and other institutions, on the other hand. The data consist of semi-structured qualitative interviews of Finnish parents with a four-year-old child. The results show that the asynchronous times generated by non-standard wor… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…This translated into a higher incidence of precariousness and inequalities: today, being in paid work does no longer protect from poverty (Bonoli, 2007;Marx & Nolan, 2014). The polarisation between well-paid, stable jobs on the one hand, and lowpaid, non-standard, non-permanent jobs on the other (Palier & Thelen, 2010) have consequences for individuals (different levels of social protection, access to health insurance, career perspectives) (Emmenegger et al, 2012), for child rearing and children's well-being (Pollmann-Schult & Li, 2020;Siippainen et al, 2023) and for society at large (unemployment rates, poverty and inwork poverty, rising inequality) (Marx & Nolan, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This translated into a higher incidence of precariousness and inequalities: today, being in paid work does no longer protect from poverty (Bonoli, 2007;Marx & Nolan, 2014). The polarisation between well-paid, stable jobs on the one hand, and lowpaid, non-standard, non-permanent jobs on the other (Palier & Thelen, 2010) have consequences for individuals (different levels of social protection, access to health insurance, career perspectives) (Emmenegger et al, 2012), for child rearing and children's well-being (Pollmann-Schult & Li, 2020;Siippainen et al, 2023) and for society at large (unemployment rates, poverty and inwork poverty, rising inequality) (Marx & Nolan, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%