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Introduction: space, place and the geographies of...
Journal article

Introduction: space, place and the geographies of women's caregiving work

Abstract

The vast majority of caregivers, whether formal or informal, paid or unpaid, are women. Health care restructuring across the West, inspired by a shift from the welfare to neoliberal state, has greatly impacted caregiving. The idea for this collection arose as a result of a special paper session on the geographies of caregiving, held as part of the Association of American Geographers Meeting (Chicago, 2006). In hearing the papers presented, it became clear that geographers are engaged in interesting and innovative research in this area, much of which involves women's caregiving work in particular. As both unpaid informal family caregiving and paid formal practitioner-provided care are mainly addressed in this collection, they are briefly discussed in this editorial. This is followed by a discussion of the geographical contributions to the growing caregiving literature, which provides the foundation for an overview of ongoing and new research directions. The four articles that make up this special issue are then reviewed in brief. Finally, we identify issues that cut across all four articles, leading to a discussion of future research directions.

Authors

Williams A; Crooks VA

Journal

Gender Place & Culture, Vol. 15, No. 3, pp. 243–247

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

June 1, 2008

DOI

10.1080/09663690801996254

ISSN

0966-369X

Labels

Fields of Research (FoR)

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