‘I don’t think they were clapping for me’. Home care workers during the covid-19 pandemic.
Authors: Read, R.
Editors: Tyler, K., Banducci, S. and Degnan, C.
Publisher: Routledge
Place of Publication: London
Abstract:This chapter explores the ways in which the pandemic and Brexit have exposed and intensified long term crises within social care provision in England. I focus on home care workers who provide care to older, disabled and chronically ill people in their own homes. First, I examine how gender, class and race hierarchies have been historically embedded within home care work, reproducing it as a low status, low wage occupation within post World War Two welfare capitalism in the UK. I then focus on a case study of home care workers in southern England during 2020-2021, examining the impact of the pandemic emergency on their working conditions and experiences.
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/39859/
Source: Manual
‘I don’t think they were clapping for me’. Home care workers during the covid-19 pandemic.
Authors: Read, R.
Editors: Tyler, K., Banducci, S.A. and Degnan, C.
Publisher: Routledge
Place of Publication: Abingdon
Abstract:This chapter explores the ways in which the pandemic and Brexit have exposed and intensified long term crises within social care provision in England. I focus on home care workers who provide care to older, disabled and chronically ill people in their own homes. First, I examine how gender, class and race hierarchies have been historically embedded within home care work, reproducing it as a low status, low wage occupation within post World War Two welfare capitalism in the UK. I then focus on a case study of home care workers in southern England during 2020-2021, examining the impact of the pandemic emergency on their working conditions and experiences.
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/39859/
Source: BURO EPrints