单身母亲与有偿工作:理性经济人还是性别化的道德理性?

Lone Mothers and Paid Work - Rational Economic Man or Gendered Moral Rationalities?

Feminist Economics · 1997
被引 110
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

批判理性经济人模型在解释单身母亲就业决策上的不足,提出“性别化的道德理性”概念,基于英国访谈和普查数据,发现非市场因素(如对母亲角色的集体理解)是主要驱动力。

Abstract

In this article we examine the inadequacies of the rational economic man approach for understanding individual economic decision-making, and we suggest an alternative concept which we call ''gendered moral rationalities.'' We carry out this critique in the context of research on lone motherhood and paid work. This is an important social and political issue where analyses commonly use the rational economic man approach (although often only implicitly). However, these analyses have not, we argue, been able to understand the social processes by which lone mothers take up, or do not take up, paid work. In this paper we take the debate further by using recent empirical work on the employment position and values of lone mothers in Britain, integrating information from interviews with census data. The results suggest that it is nonmarket, collective relations and understandings about motherhood and employment which are the primary factors in explaining lone mothers' uptake of paid work. We term these ''gendered moral rationalities.'' While individual levels of human capital and policy constraints remain important, in a causal sense these are best seen as contingent, secondary factors. The source of economic rationality therefore, at least in this case, primarily lies outside the market and in the domain of collective, and highly gendered, understandings about proper social behavior. This critique parallels recent work by feminist economists who call for a complete restructuring in how economists think and conduct their research.

单身母亲有偿劳动性别化道德理性理性经济人