墨西哥和秘鲁对失能老年人的家庭责任分配

Allocating Family Responsibilities for Dependent Older People in Mexico and Peru

Journal of Development Studies · 2017
被引 30
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

基于19个深度家庭案例和定量调查数据,研究墨西哥和秘鲁家庭如何协商照料失能老人,发现照料安排高度性别化,男性照料者多扮演间接组织角色,协商主要在女性间进行,且受生命周期效应影响大于物质交换。

Abstract

This paper applies different analytical frameworks to explore processes of family bargaining about providing care for dependent older people in Mexico and Peru. These frameworks include cultural norms, life course effects and material exchange. The paper is based on 19 in-depth qualitative family case studies, which are linked to a wider set of quantitative survey data. Care arrangements and bargaining processes are revealed to be highly gendered, and largely conform to prevailing cultural norms. Rather than neutral and objective, the self-identified role as main carer is found to be subjective and potentially ambiguous. The few men who self-identify as main carers are more likely to play an indirect, organisational role than engage directly in daily care. As such, bargaining mainly relates to which woman performs the main care role, and large family networks mean that there is usually more than one candidate carer. Bargaining can occur inter-generationally and conjugally, but bargaining between siblings is of particular importance. Bargaining is framed by the uncertain trajectory of older people’s care needs, and arrangements are sometimes reconfigured in response to changing care needs or family circumstances. Taking the narratives at face value, the influence of life course effects on bargaining and care arrangements is more obvious than material exchange. There are, however, indications that economic considerations, particularly inheritance, still play an important behind the scenes role.

家庭照料谈判性别化照料分工代际与同胞协商失能老人照料安排