POL-365
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Political Economy of Care/Work
Department(s)
Course Description
Whether labeled work/family balance, the second shift, or the care gap, tensions between care and work present important challenges for individuals, families and states. This seminar interrogates the gendered implications of the political and economic distinction between care and work. How do public policies and employment practices construct a false choice between work and care? What role should the state play in the provision of care for children, the sick, the disabled and the elderly? How does the invisibility of carework contribute to the wage gap in the United States and the feminization of poverty globally? Course readings will draw from the literatures on political economy, feminist economics and social policy. Distrbution area: social sceinces or cultural pluralism.
Course Type
Academic Credit, DIST-SOCIAL SCIENCES, DIST-CULTURAL PLURALISM, Alternative Voices, INTER.DISC-GENDER STUDIES, Academic Evaluate Course