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从“没人给我们鼓掌”到“坏妈妈”:新冠疫情与加拿大的育儿循环

From “nobody's clapping for us” to “bad moms”: COVID‐19 and the circle of childcare in Canada

Gender, Work and Organization · 2021
被引 41
ABS 3

中文导读

基于加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省16位家长和育儿教育者的访谈,分析疫情如何影响有偿育儿、无偿育儿和其他工作,揭示政策将照料责任转嫁给女性且缺乏认可与支持。

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the importance of childcare to national economies in general and women's economic participation in particular, spurring renewed interest in childcare policy in many countries that have implemented lockdowns. This paper adopts a circle of care framework to analyzes how COVID-19 has affected paid childcare, unpaid childcare and other paid work, and the relationship between these sectors. Analysis is grounded in the lived experiences of parents and childcare educators, documented through 16 semi-structured interviews during the initial lockdown (March-June 2020) in British Columbia, Canada. Experiences from educators suggest their safety was not prioritized, and that their contributions were undervalued and went unrecognized. Mothers, who provided the majority of unpaid care, not only lost income due to care demands, but struggled to access necessities, with some reporting increased personal insecurity. Those attempting to work from home also experienced feelings of guilt and distress as they tried to manage the triple burden. Similarities of experiences across the circle of care suggest the COVID-19 childcare policy response in BC Canada downloaded care responsibilities on to women without corresponding recognition or support, causing women to absorb the costs of care work, with potential long-term negative effects on women's careers and well-being, as well as on the resilience of the circle of care. Pandemic recovery and preparedness policies that aim to promote gender equality must consider all sectors of the circle of care and the relationships between them.

育儿政策性别平等新冠疫情无偿照料劳动加拿大