A consideration of love labour in informal caring: family caring in Ireland

Typeset version

 

TY  - JOUR
  - O'Riordan, J., Ó hAdhmaill, F., ; Duggan, H. 
  - 2010
  - May
  - Irish Journal of Sociology
  - A consideration of love labour in informal caring: family caring in Ireland
  - Published
  - ()
  - 18
  - 1
  - 82
  - 99
  - http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/manup/ijs/2010/00000018/00000001/art00005A consideration of love labour in informal caringAbstract:This paper is drawn from research on family carers that was carried out in the Cork area of Ireland in 2007-08. The research itself focused on the experiences of family carers and their access to support services in the locality. Key findings indicate that individuals are often caring for family members over the long term, often with minimal access to discretionary community support services. The assumption made by the Irish State, by community services, by carers themselves and by extended family members and friends, is that the onus is and should be on close relatives, and particularly women, to take the major responsibility for caring, when this care takes place in the home (Timonen and McMenamin 2002). This also contributes to the invisibility and undervaluation of family carers (Baker et al. 2004; Lynch 2007). The development of theoretical perspectives on caring can contribute to highlighting the manner in which assumptions about family, domesticity, gender roles and household continue to disadvantage those located primarily within the private sphere.Articles that cite this article?Keywords: CARERS; LOVE LABOUR; FAMILY CARE; CARING RELATIONSHIPS; IRELANDDocument Type: Research articlePublication date: 2010-05-01
  - Manchester
  - http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/manup/ijs/2010/00000018/00000001/art00005
DA  - 2010/05
ER  - 
@article{V75254518,
   = {O'Riordan, J., Ó hAdhmaill, F.,  and  Duggan, H. },
   = {2010},
   = {May},
   = {Irish Journal of Sociology},
   = {A consideration of love labour in informal caring: family caring in Ireland},
   = {Published},
   = {()},
   = {18},
   = {1},
  pages = {82--99},
   = {{http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/manup/ijs/2010/00000018/00000001/art00005A consideration of love labour in informal caringAbstract:This paper is drawn from research on family carers that was carried out in the Cork area of Ireland in 2007-08. The research itself focused on the experiences of family carers and their access to support services in the locality. Key findings indicate that individuals are often caring for family members over the long term, often with minimal access to discretionary community support services. The assumption made by the Irish State, by community services, by carers themselves and by extended family members and friends, is that the onus is and should be on close relatives, and particularly women, to take the major responsibility for caring, when this care takes place in the home (Timonen and McMenamin 2002). This also contributes to the invisibility and undervaluation of family carers (Baker et al. 2004; Lynch 2007). The development of theoretical perspectives on caring can contribute to highlighting the manner in which assumptions about family, domesticity, gender roles and household continue to disadvantage those located primarily within the private sphere.Articles that cite this article?Keywords: CARERS; LOVE LABOUR; FAMILY CARE; CARING RELATIONSHIPS; IRELANDDocument Type: Research articlePublication date: 2010-05-01}},
   = {Manchester},
   = {http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/manup/ijs/2010/00000018/00000001/art00005},
  source = {IRIS}
}
AUTHORSO'Riordan, J., Ó hAdhmaill, F., ; Duggan, H.
YEAR2010
MONTHMay
JOURNAL_CODEIrish Journal of Sociology
TITLEA consideration of love labour in informal caring: family caring in Ireland
STATUSPublished
TIMES_CITED()
SEARCH_KEYWORD
VOLUME18
ISSUE1
START_PAGE82
END_PAGE99
ABSTRACThttp://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/manup/ijs/2010/00000018/00000001/art00005A consideration of love labour in informal caringAbstract:This paper is drawn from research on family carers that was carried out in the Cork area of Ireland in 2007-08. The research itself focused on the experiences of family carers and their access to support services in the locality. Key findings indicate that individuals are often caring for family members over the long term, often with minimal access to discretionary community support services. The assumption made by the Irish State, by community services, by carers themselves and by extended family members and friends, is that the onus is and should be on close relatives, and particularly women, to take the major responsibility for caring, when this care takes place in the home (Timonen and McMenamin 2002). This also contributes to the invisibility and undervaluation of family carers (Baker et al. 2004; Lynch 2007). The development of theoretical perspectives on caring can contribute to highlighting the manner in which assumptions about family, domesticity, gender roles and household continue to disadvantage those located primarily within the private sphere.Articles that cite this article?Keywords: CARERS; LOVE LABOUR; FAMILY CARE; CARING RELATIONSHIPS; IRELANDDocument Type: Research articlePublication date: 2010-05-01
PUBLISHER_LOCATIONManchester
ISBN_ISSN
EDITION
URLhttp://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/manup/ijs/2010/00000018/00000001/art00005
DOI_LINK
FUNDING_BODY
GRANT_DETAILS