Cornell University Press
Home Care Fault Lines
Über dieses Buch
In this revealing look at home care, Cynthia J. Cranford illustrates how elderly and disabled people and the immigrant women workers who assist them in daily activities develop meaningful relationships even when their different ages, abilities, races, nationalities, and socioeconomic backgrounds generate tension. As Cranford shows, workers can experience devaluation within racialized and gendered class hierarchies, which shapes their pursuit of security.
Cranford analyzes the tensions, alliances, and compromises between security for workers and flexibility for elderly and disabled people, and she argues that workers and recipients negotiate flexibility and security within intersecting inequalities in varying ways depending on multiple interacting dynamics.
What comes through from Cranford's analysis is the need for deeply democratic alliances across multiple axes of inequality. To support both flexible care and secure work, she argues for an intimate community unionism that advocates for universal state funding, designs culturally sensitive labor market intermediaries run by workers and recipients to help people find jobs or workers, and addresses everyday tensions in home workplaces.
Information zu Autoren / Herausgebern
Cynthia Cranford is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Toronto. She is the co-author of Self-employed Workers Organize. Follow her on X @Cranford1971.
Rezensionen
We can expect Home Care Fault Lines to become a pivotal reference for international care scholarship.
In Home Care Fault Lines, Cynthia Cranford has written an ambitious and pathbreaking book. More than ever before, we cannot ignore the glaring need to invest in the home care sector in a way that is responsive to the needs of both care workers and recipients of care. Luckily, just in time, Cranford's book has provided us with an insightful analysis of how to do just that.
Home Care Fault Lines provides an innovative and essential analysis of the politics of community-based personal and attendant care and demonstrates the power of sociological analysis to inform policy and promote social justice.
Cranford's in-depth, thought-provoking, and insightful work is an important read not only for scholars of care work and labor, but also for activists, social workers, and organizers outside of academia who are interested in building alliances of care.
Mary Romero, author of Introducing Intersectionality:
Cynthia Cranford presents a compelling and nuanced analysis of the multifaceted conflict arising from inadequate support programs. Recognizing both provider and receiver are potentially vulnerable populations, Home Care Fault Lines is a must-read for coalition building with the elderly, disabled and immigrant workers.
Eileen Boris, University of California, Santa Barbara:
Home Care Fault Lines takes a well-grounded research design, evaluates it in light of a wide interdisciplinary reading of care, labor, disability, immigration, race, social movements, and other related literatures, and comes up with a model for change that builds upon what already has happened to envision new possibilities.
Fachgebiete
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Frontmatter
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Contents
vii -
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Acknowledgments
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A Note on Sources
xiii -
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Introduction: Tensions between Flexibility and Security
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1. Gender, Migration, and the Pursuit of Security
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2. Disability and the Quest for Flexibility
40 -
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3. Managing Flexibility without Security in Toronto’s Direct Funding
59 -
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4. Negotiating Flexibility with Security in Los Angeles’s In-Home Supportive Services
83 -
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5. Agency-Led Flexibility and Insecurity in Toronto’s Home Care
107 -
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6. Bargaining for Security with Flexibility in Toronto’s Attendant Services
132 -
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7. Toward Flexible Care and Secure Work in Intimate Labor
151 -
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Appendix: Interviews and Methods
175 -
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Notes
179 -
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References
201 -
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Index
213