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2.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22842890

ABSTRACT

Due to the Infectious Disease Prevention Act, public health services in Germany are obliged to check the infection prevention in hospitals and other medical facilities as well as in nursing homes. In Frankfurt/Main, Germany, standardized control visits have been performed for many years. In 2011 focus was laid on cleaning and disinfection of surfaces. All 41 nursing homes were checked according to a standardized checklist covering quality of structure (i.e. staffing, hygiene concept), quality of process (observation of the cleaning processes in the homes) and quality of output, which was monitored by checking the cleaning of fluorescent marks which had been applied some days before and should have been removed via cleaning in the following days before the final check. In more than two thirds of the homes, cleaning personnel were salaried, in one third external personnel were hired. Of the homes 85% provided service clothing and all of them offered protective clothing. All homes had established hygiene and cleaning concepts, however, in 15% of the homes concepts for the handling of Norovirus and in 30% concepts for the handling of Clostridium difficile were missing. Regarding process quality only half of the processes observed, i.e. cleaning of hand contact surfaces, such as handrails, washing areas and bins, were correct. Only 44% of the cleaning controls were correct with enormous differences between the homes (0-100%). The correlation between quality of process and quality of output was significant. There was good quality of structure in the homes but regarding quality of process and outcome there was great need for improvement. This was especially due to faults in communication and coordination between cleaning personnel and nursing personnel. Quality outcome was neither associated with the number of the places for residents nor with staffing. Thus, not only quality of structure but also quality of process and outcome should be checked by the public health services.


Subject(s)
Communicable Disease Control/legislation & jurisprudence , Disinfection/legislation & jurisprudence , Disinfection/standards , Homes for the Aged/legislation & jurisprudence , Homes for the Aged/standards , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Household Work/standards , Nursing Homes/legislation & jurisprudence , Nursing Homes/standards , Quality Assurance, Health Care/standards , Aged , Caliciviridae Infections/prevention & control , Clostridioides difficile , Clostridium Infections/prevention & control , Clostridium Infections/transmission , Gastroenteritis/prevention & control , Germany , Health Services Research , Humans , Norovirus , Quality Improvement/legislation & jurisprudence , Universal Precautions/methods
3.
Soc Polit ; 19(1): 38-57, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22611572

ABSTRACT

The article is the result of qualitative research of informal care markets in Slovenia in the field of childcare, elder care, and cleaning. The author assesses Slovenia's position in the "global care chain" and finds that "local care chains" prevail in the field of childcare and elder care, while a co-occurrence of female gender, "other" ethnicity, and poverty is typical in the field of household cleaning. The main emphasis of the article is on the analysis of hierarchization of the informal market of care work according to following two criteria: social reputation of individual type of care work and citizenship status of care workers.


Subject(s)
Caregivers , Child Care , Hierarchy, Social , Home Care Services , Household Work , Women , Work , Caregivers/economics , Caregivers/education , Caregivers/history , Caregivers/legislation & jurisprudence , Caregivers/psychology , Child Care/economics , Child Care/history , Child Care/legislation & jurisprudence , Child Care/psychology , Child, Preschool , Gender Identity , Hierarchy, Social/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Home Care Services/economics , Home Care Services/history , Home Care Services/legislation & jurisprudence , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Slovenia/ethnology , Women/education , Women/history , Women/psychology , Work/economics , Work/history , Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Work/physiology , Work/psychology
4.
Sociol Inq ; 82(1): 78-99, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22379611

ABSTRACT

This article explores whether mothers' perceived control over their own workplace flexibility options has any relationship to their satisfaction with their husbands' contributions to household labor in the United States. We hypothesize that flexibility enhances their ability to more adeptly engage in role management in multiple life areas, thus enabling them to be more satisfied with their partners' domestic input as well. We use a unique data set of 1,078 randomly sampled women involved in mothers' organizations that generally attract members based on their current level of participation in the paid labor market. We then link nine distinct workplace flexibility policies with mothers' satisfaction related to their husbands' participation in all household tasks, as well as a subset of female-typed tasks. We find that across both arrays of tasks, mothers with more perceived control over work-related schedule predictability and those that had the ability to secure employment again after an extended break had higher levels of satisfaction with their husbands' participation in household labor. In addition, short-term time off to address unexpected needs was important for all tasks considered together only.


Subject(s)
Household Work , Job Satisfaction , Social Perception , Spouses , Workplace , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Marriage/ethnology , Marriage/history , Marriage/legislation & jurisprudence , Marriage/psychology , Social Behavior/history , Spouses/education , Spouses/ethnology , Spouses/history , Spouses/legislation & jurisprudence , Spouses/psychology , United States/ethnology , Workplace/economics , Workplace/history , Workplace/legislation & jurisprudence , Workplace/psychology
6.
South Asia Res ; 31(2): 119-34, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22073433

ABSTRACT

This article explores the impact of labour force participation of Indian women on the consumption expenditure of their households. Field survey data were collected from working-wife and non-working wife households in Kerala, the state in India with the highest labour market participation of women in the organised sector. Differences in time-saving consumption expenditures of working and non-working wife households and different variables influencing consumption expenditures were researched. The study shows that among the variables which positively affect the time-saving consumption expenditure of the households, non-economic factors influence the time-saving consumption expenditure of the working-wife households more prominently than in non-working wife households.


Subject(s)
Empirical Research , Household Products , Household Work , Time Management , Women's Health , Women, Working , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Household Products/economics , Household Products/history , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , India/ethnology , Time Management/economics , Time Management/psychology , Women's Health/ethnology , Women's Health/history , Women's Rights/economics , Women's Rights/education , Women's Rights/history , Women's Rights/legislation & jurisprudence , Women, Working/education , Women, Working/history , Women, Working/legislation & jurisprudence , Women, Working/psychology
7.
J South Afr Stud ; 37(2): 247-64, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22026027

ABSTRACT

This article examines the contradictions that African girls' schooling presented for colonial governance in Natal, through the case study of Inanda Seminary, the region's first and largest all-female school for Africans. While patriarchal colonial law circumscribed the educational options of girls whose fathers opposed their schooling, the head of Natal's nascent educational bureaucracy argued that African girls' education in Western domesticity would be essential in creating different sorts of families with different sorts of needs. In monogamous families, Native Schools Inspector Robert Plant argued, husbands and sons would be taught to 'want' enough to impel them to labour for wages - but they would also be sufficiently satisfied by their domestic comforts to avoid political unrest. Thus, even as colonial educational officials clamped down on African boys' curricula - attempting to restrict their schooling to the barest preparation for unskilled wage labour - they allowed missionaries autonomy to educate young women whose fathers did not challenge their school attendance. This was because young women's role in the social reproduction of new sorts of families made their education ultimately appear to be a benefit to colonial governance. As young men pursued wage labour, young women began to comprise the majority of African students, laying the groundwork for the feminisation of schooling in modern southern Africa.


Subject(s)
Child Welfare , Education , Family , Feminization , Household Work , Social Change , Child , Child Development , Child Welfare/economics , Child Welfare/ethnology , Child Welfare/history , Child Welfare/legislation & jurisprudence , Child Welfare/psychology , Child, Preschool , Education/economics , Education/history , Education/legislation & jurisprudence , Family/ethnology , Family/history , Family/psychology , Female , Feminization/ethnology , Feminization/history , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Male , Social Change/history
8.
J Womens Hist ; 23(2): 14-38, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21966705

ABSTRACT

In response to the poor working conditions suffered by domestics struggling to survive the Depression, middle-class women's organizations initiated various legislative reforms aimed at tackling the problems they believed plagued the occupation. Throughout these years, organized women debated three key pieces of reform related to domestic service: efforts to suppress street-corner markets, health requirements for prospective domestics, and state-level wage and hour reform. These reforms were united by the rhetoric of privacy, which clubwomen used both to oppose wage and hour reform and to support requirements that domestics have physicals before applying for work. This article examines the fine distinction that middle-class women's organizations drew between public and private in the appropriate application of government power and the resulting conflict between progressive women's gender ideology and their most deeply-held reform ideals. In doing so, it reveals organized women's struggle to reconcile their humane ideals with the reality in their kitchens.


Subject(s)
Employment , Household Work , Social Change , Social Class , Social Problems , Women, Working , Employment/economics , Employment/history , Employment/legislation & jurisprudence , Employment/psychology , Feminism/history , Gender Identity , History, 20th Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , New York/ethnology , Occupations/economics , Occupations/history , Occupations/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Change/history , Social Class/history , Social Problems/economics , Social Problems/ethnology , Social Problems/history , Social Problems/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Problems/psychology , Women's Health/ethnology , Women's Health/history , Women's Rights/economics , Women's Rights/education , Women's Rights/history , Women's Rights/legislation & jurisprudence , Women, Working/education , Women, Working/history , Women, Working/legislation & jurisprudence , Women, Working/psychology
9.
Eur Hist Q ; 41(2): 213-30, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21913364

ABSTRACT

The immigration policies adopted by Western European states during the interwar period were marked by increasing restriction, especially after 1933. One notable exception to this was the relatively generous treatment afforded to women who were prepared to take up employment as domestic servants. This article looks at the reasons behind this anomaly and compares the responses of three states that were in the front line of the refugee efflux from Germany and Eastern Europe in the years leading up to the Second World War.


Subject(s)
Emigration and Immigration , Employment , Household Work , Refugees , Women's Health , Women, Working , Belgium/ethnology , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Emigrants and Immigrants/education , Emigrants and Immigrants/history , Emigrants and Immigrants/legislation & jurisprudence , Emigrants and Immigrants/psychology , Emigration and Immigration/history , Emigration and Immigration/legislation & jurisprudence , Employment/economics , Employment/history , Employment/legislation & jurisprudence , Employment/psychology , History, 20th Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Netherlands/ethnology , Refugees/education , Refugees/history , Refugees/legislation & jurisprudence , Refugees/psychology , United Kingdom/ethnology , Women's Health/ethnology , Women's Health/history , Women's Rights/economics , Women's Rights/education , Women's Rights/history , Women's Rights/legislation & jurisprudence , Women, Working/education , Women, Working/history , Women, Working/legislation & jurisprudence , Women, Working/psychology
10.
J Asian Afr Stud ; 46(4): 390-403, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21823270

ABSTRACT

This article explores the interconnectedness between labor migration, gender, and the family economy in northwestern Ghana in the 20th century. It focuses specifically on the Dagaaba of the Nadowli and Jirapa administrative districts of what is now the Upper West Region (UWR). It examines how the relationships between men and women in terms of roles, status, access to productive resources and inheritance, changed in tandem with broader changes in society in the 20th century; changes that over time produced enhanced value and elevated status for women in the family. These changes in gender relations are reflected increasingly in the belief among elderly men that 'now if you have only sons, you are dead'. By focusing on the lived experiences of ordinary women and men in the migration process, it argues that even though indigenous social structures privileged men over women in almost all spheres of life, Dagaaba women were nonetheless significantly active in shaping the history of their communities and that gender relations in Dagaaba communities were not static ­ they changed over time and generation. This article contributes to the ongoing discussion of the internal migration phenomenon in West Africa, which has so far attracted scant historical analysis.


Subject(s)
Family Characteristics , Gender Identity , Population Dynamics , Social Change , Socioeconomic Factors , Transients and Migrants , Family/ethnology , Family/history , Family/psychology , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Family Characteristics/history , Ghana/ethnology , Hierarchy, Social/history , History, 20th Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Interpersonal Relations/history , Population Dynamics/history , Social Change/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history , Transients and Migrants/education , Transients and Migrants/history , Transients and Migrants/legislation & jurisprudence , Transients and Migrants/psychology
11.
Womens Hist Rev ; 20(2): 207-25, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21751478

ABSTRACT

Frequently eighteenth-century service is described as a life-cycle stage used to build up the financial wherewithal to set up house. As such it was central to the way youth or girlhood was traversed, and studies of adolescent years rightly emphasise the importance of service. However, this narrative, while largely accurate, is also problematic. What happened when service did not end with marriage, or when a woman remained single well into adulthood? In practice, servants were found among both the married and single, and among the young and the old. Concentrating on the eighteenth century, and incorporating material from Nordic Europe, this article teases out some of the nuances in the context and experience of service that partially disrupt the established narrative.


Subject(s)
Employment , Household Work , Life Change Events , Marital Status , Women's Health , Women, Working , Adolescent , Employment/economics , Employment/history , Employment/legislation & jurisprudence , Employment/psychology , Europe/ethnology , History, 18th Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Life Change Events/history , Marital Status/ethnology , Single Person/education , Single Person/history , Single Person/legislation & jurisprudence , Single Person/psychology , Social Change/history , Social Conditions/economics , Social Conditions/history , Social Conditions/legislation & jurisprudence , Women's Health/ethnology , Women's Health/history , Women's Rights/economics , Women's Rights/education , Women's Rights/history , Women's Rights/legislation & jurisprudence , Women, Working/education , Women, Working/history , Women, Working/legislation & jurisprudence , Women, Working/psychology
12.
Can Public Policy ; 37(Suppl): S57-S71, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21751485

ABSTRACT

This study tracked the occurrence of death, widowhood, institutionalization, and coresidence with others between 1994 and 2002 for a nationally representative sample of 1,580 Canadian respondents who, at initial interview, were aged 55 and older and living in a couple-only household. Although the majority of seniors remained in a couple-only household throughout the duration of the survey, nearly one in four who experienced a first transition underwent one or more subsequent transitions. Age, economic resources, and health were significant predictors of a specific first transition and multiple transitions. More work is needed to understand the dynamics of the aging process.


Subject(s)
Life Change Events , Residence Characteristics , Retirement , Socioeconomic Factors , Spouses , Widowhood , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Canada/ethnology , Family Relations/ethnology , Family Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Institutionalization/economics , Institutionalization/history , Institutionalization/legislation & jurisprudence , Life Change Events/history , Marriage/ethnology , Marriage/history , Marriage/legislation & jurisprudence , Marriage/psychology , Residence Characteristics/history , Retirement/economics , Retirement/history , Retirement/legislation & jurisprudence , Retirement/psychology , Socioeconomic Factors/history , Spouses/education , Spouses/ethnology , Spouses/history , Spouses/legislation & jurisprudence , Spouses/psychology , Widowhood/economics , Widowhood/ethnology , Widowhood/history , Widowhood/legislation & jurisprudence , Widowhood/psychology
13.
Am J Econ Sociol ; 70(1): 152-86, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21322897

ABSTRACT

Using a permanent income hypothesis approach and an income-giving status interaction effect, a double hurdle model provides evidence of significant differences from the impact of household income and various household characteristics on both a household's likelihood of giving and its level of giving to religion, charity, education, others outside the household, and politics. An analysis of resulting income elasticity estimates revealed that households consider religious giving a necessity good at all levels of income, while other categories of giving are generally found to be luxury goods. Further, those who gave to religion were found to give more to education and charity then those not giving to religion, and higher education households were more likely to give to religion than households with less education. This analysis suggests that there may be more to religious giving behavior than has been assumed in prior studies and underscores the need for further research into the motivation for religious giving. Specifically, these findings point to an enduring, internal motivation for giving rather than an external, "What do I get for what I give," motive.


Subject(s)
Culture , Family , Household Work , Income , Quality of Life , Social Responsibility , Charities/economics , Charities/education , Charities/history , Charities/legislation & jurisprudence , Education/economics , Education/history , Education/legislation & jurisprudence , Family/ethnology , Family/history , Family/psychology , Family Health/ethnology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Income/history , Life Style/ethnology , Life Style/history , Quality of Life/legislation & jurisprudence , Quality of Life/psychology , Religion/history , Social Values/ethnology , Social Values/history , Social Welfare/economics , Social Welfare/ethnology , Social Welfare/history , Social Welfare/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Welfare/psychology , Socioeconomic Factors/history
14.
Am J Econ Sociol ; 70(1): 187-209, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21322898

ABSTRACT

This article discusses how large lottery winnings are experienced and used by the winners. The study draws on a survey of 420 Swedish winners, which is analyzed against the background of previous research from the USA and Europe. The analyses show that winners are cautious about realizing any dreams of becoming someone else somewhere else. This result contradicts theories suggesting that identities are being liquefied by the commercially driven consumer culture in affluent Western societies. In contrast, the article concludes that winners generally try to stay much the same, but on a somewhat higher level of consumption. The critical situation that large winnings produce is generally met by an attempt to hold on to one's identity and social relations. In addition, the article shows that lump sum winners tend to save and invest large parts of their winnings, compared with winners of monthly installments who are more likely to spend on leisure and consumption. These results indicate that "wild" lump sums make winners "tame" their winnings more firmly, whereas "domesticated" monthly instalments can be spent more thoughtlessly without changing identity or becoming an unfortunate winner.


Subject(s)
Gambling , Interpersonal Relations , Leisure Activities , Personhood , Social Behavior , Europe/ethnology , Gambling/economics , Gambling/ethnology , Gambling/history , Gambling/psychology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Individuality , Interpersonal Relations/history , Leisure Activities/economics , Leisure Activities/psychology , Life Style/ethnology , Life Style/history , Social Behavior/history , Social Identification , Sweden/ethnology , United States/ethnology
15.
Signs (Chic) ; 36(2): 437-62, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21114083

ABSTRACT

Drawing on microlevel research with men and women of differing ages living in rural and urban Siem Reap (home to the global heritage and tourist site of Angkor), this article focuses on the key discourses and practices that men and women draw on to (de)stabilize putatively traditional ideals of Cambodian womanhood and to (re)situate them in the contemporary period. Mapping the complex ways that people represent, make sense of, and respond to prerevolutionary cultural norms of female behavior in a very different era (with particular, though not exclusive, attention paid to mobility and education), the article demonstrates how deeper ideological changes concerning women's relationship to Khmer tradition will have to accompany the surface reordering of Cambodian gender relations if equality between women and men is to be achieved. Until then, the ideal woman in contemporary Cambodian society is ultimately one who can creatively negotiate and balance the multiple demands placed on her by society, family, and self.


Subject(s)
Anthropology, Cultural , Family Characteristics , Social Control Policies , Women's Rights , Women , Anthropology, Cultural/education , Anthropology, Cultural/history , Cambodia/ethnology , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Family Characteristics/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Rural Population/history , Social Conformity , Social Control Policies/economics , Social Control Policies/history , Social Control Policies/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Identification , Urban Population/history , Women/education , Women/history , Women/psychology , Women's Health/ethnology , Women's Health/history , Women's Rights/economics , Women's Rights/education , Women's Rights/history , Women's Rights/legislation & jurisprudence
16.
Q J Econ ; 63(1): 187-210, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21141645

ABSTRACT

This paper uses the British Household Panel Survey to present the first estimates of the housework-wage relationship in Britain. Controlling for permanent unobserved heterogeneity, we find that housework has a negative impact on the wages of men and women, both married and single, who work full-time. Among women working part-time, only single women suffer a housework penalty. The housework penalty is uniform across occupations within full-time jobs but some part-time jobs appear to be more compatible with housework than others. We find tentative evidence that the housework penalty is larger when there are children present.


Subject(s)
Family Characteristics , Household Work , Socioeconomic Factors , Women's Health , Women, Working , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Family Characteristics/history , Family Health/ethnology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Income/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history , United Kingdom/ethnology , Women's Health/ethnology , Women's Health/history , Women's Rights/economics , Women's Rights/education , Women's Rights/history , Women's Rights/legislation & jurisprudence , Women, Working/education , Women, Working/history , Women, Working/legislation & jurisprudence , Women, Working/psychology
17.
Lat Am Res Rev ; 45(2): 90-113, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21188888

ABSTRACT

Grounded in literature review and an ethnographic study, this article examines contemporary Brazilian domestic life. Relations among women (employers and maids) and between women and men are analyzed with a focus on the home as a space in which gender, race, and class inequalities are constantly reproduced. The article argues that what happens in domestic life is constitutive of wider social divisions and that the domestic is a universe integral to the national social context. A case in point is the connection between the widespread use of paid domestic labor and the naturalization of black women as subservient, complementing the pairing of whiteness and class entitlement. Another case is the buffering role of maids in the development of gender conflicts in well-off homes, thus blurring gender hierarchies at a broader scale. Locating the domestic within the recent discussion on global domestic labor, the article compares particularities of Brazilian domestic life to those elsewhere.


Subject(s)
Family Characteristics , Gender Identity , Household Work , Occupations , Social Class , Women, Working , Anthropology, Cultural/education , Anthropology, Cultural/history , Brazil/ethnology , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Family Characteristics/history , Family Health/ethnology , Family Relations/ethnology , Family Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Occupations/economics , Occupations/history , Occupations/legislation & jurisprudence , Race Relations/history , Race Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , Race Relations/psychology , Social Class/history , Women, Working/education , Women, Working/history , Women, Working/legislation & jurisprudence , Women, Working/psychology
18.
Lat Am Res Rev ; 45(3): 165-86, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21188892

ABSTRACT

Using data from the National Survey of Standards of Living conducted in Guatemala in 2000, this article tests the hypothesis that Guatemalan households use child labor and reduce child schooling to cope with household shocks. First, the authors use factor analysis to estimate the latent household propensity to natural disasters and socioeconomic shocks. Then, they estimate bivariate probit models to identify the determinants of child labor and schooling, including household propensity to natural disasters and socioeconomic shocks. Results suggest that households use child labor to cope with natural disasters and socioeconomic shocks. In contrast, the authors found no evidence that suggests that households reduce child schooling to cope with shocks. Findings also indicate that poor households are more likely to use child labor and schooling reduction as strategies to cope with socioeconomic shocks.


Subject(s)
Child Welfare , Education , Family Health , Family , Household Work , Socioeconomic Factors , Child , Child Care/economics , Child Care/history , Child Care/legislation & jurisprudence , Child Care/psychology , Child Welfare/economics , Child Welfare/ethnology , Child Welfare/history , Child Welfare/legislation & jurisprudence , Child Welfare/psychology , Disasters/economics , Disasters/history , Education/economics , Education/history , Education/legislation & jurisprudence , Employment/economics , Employment/history , Employment/legislation & jurisprudence , Employment/psychology , Family/ethnology , Family/history , Family/psychology , Family Health/ethnology , Guatemala/ethnology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Parent-Child Relations/ethnology , Parent-Child Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , Poverty Areas , Schools/economics , Schools/history , Schools/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Class/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history
19.
J South Afr Stud ; 36(3): 711-27, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20879189

ABSTRACT

The most distressing consequences of the HIV/AIDS pandemic's impact on children has been the development of child-headed households (CHHs). Child 'only' households challenge notions of the ideal home, family, and 'normal' childhood, as well as undermining international attempts to institute children's rights. The development of these households raises practical questions about how the children will cope without parental guidance during their childhood and how this experience will affect their adulthood. Drawing on ethnographic research with five child heads and their siblings, this article explores how orphaned children living in 'child only' households organise themselves in terms of household domestic and paid work roles, explores the socialisation of children by children and the negotiation of teenage girls' movement. Further, it examines whether the orphaned children are in some way attempting to 'mimic' previously existing family/household gender relations after parental death. The study showed that all members in the CHHs irrespective of age and gender are an integral part of household labour including food production. Although there is masculinisation of domestic chores in boys 'only' households, roles are distributed by age. On the other hand, households with a gender mix tended to follow traditional gender norms. Conflict often arose when boys controlled teenage girls' movement and sexuality. There is a need for further research on CHHs to better understand orphans' experiences, and to inform policy interventions.


Subject(s)
Child, Orphaned , Family Characteristics , Gender Identity , Rural Population , Socialization , Child , Child Custody/economics , Child Custody/education , Child Custody/history , Child Custody/legislation & jurisprudence , Child Welfare/economics , Child Welfare/ethnology , Child Welfare/history , Child Welfare/legislation & jurisprudence , Child Welfare/psychology , Child, Orphaned/education , Child, Orphaned/history , Child, Orphaned/legislation & jurisprudence , Child, Orphaned/psychology , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Family Characteristics/history , Family Health/ethnology , Family Relations/ethnology , Family Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Rural Population/history , Zimbabwe/ethnology
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