Migrant care workers;
care work;
Taiwan;
marketisation;
care and work;
PRIVATE PERSONAL CARE;
LONG-TERM-CARE;
DOMESTIC WORKERS;
ELDERLY-PEOPLE;
FAMILY;
MIGRATION;
POLICY;
OUTSIDERS;
QUALITY;
REGIMES;
D O I:
10.1017/S1474746421000233
中图分类号:
D58 [社会生活与社会问题];
C913 [社会生活与社会问题];
学科分类号:
摘要:
This article uses Taiwan as an example to examine how families manage work and care when the government and workplace provide limited support. Many Taiwanese households employ live-in migrant care workers to negotiate care responsibilities and adults' paid jobs. Based on interviews with employers of live-in migrant care workers and workers, the findings demonstrate that daughters-in-law and occasionally daughters and sons become employers of live-in migrant care workers because of the limitation of public care services and lack of support they receive in seeking to combine paid work and family care responsibility. Even after employing migrant workers, women retain greater care responsibility in daily practices than their husbands. Hiring live-in migrant care workers also imposes risks to all parties involved in the processes of organising, coordinating, and providing care due to the uncertainty of care quality and the nature of care work.
机构:
Johannes Kepler Univ Linz, Dept Theory Soc & Social Anal, Linz, Austria
Univ Amsterdam, Dept Anthropol, Nieuwe Achtergracht 166, NL-1018 WV Amsterdam, NetherlandsJohannes Kepler Univ Linz, Dept Theory Soc & Social Anal, Linz, Austria