Give and Take in Families

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Au Pair Girl
care work economics
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Convenience Foods
Dual Earner
Dual Earner Family
Dual Earner Households
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family economics
Family Feeding
family resource inequality
gender relations
gender roles in resource distribution
gendered division labour
High Status Food
High Status Jobs
household composition analysis
household resources
Household's Total Net Income
Household’s Total Net Income
income inequality
intra-household allocation
Lone Mothers
Low Income Lone Mother
Middle Income Level
Modern Families
money in the home
Personal Spending Money
Post Divorce
Proper Meal
Public Daycare
Registrar General's Social Classes
Registrar General’s Social Classes
Single Earner Households
social policy research
Supplementary Benefit
Supplementary Benefit Entitlement
Unemployed Households
Vice Versa
Women's Earnings
Women’s Earnings
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032530031
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Aug 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Originally published in 1987, now with a new preface, the focus of this book is the distribution of material resources, notably money, work, care and food, within and between households. Hitherto, social policy research had tended to roll households and families into one and consider them as ‘private’ spheres which only connected with society via the male head of household – the ‘breadwinner’. Examination of resource distribution had stopped short at the door of the household.

The contributors to Give and Take in Families open up the ‘Black Box’ of the family and explore the assumption that resources are equitably distributed between household members. A dominant concern is with gender relations. Each study attempts to make women – as resources in caring for other people, as providers of income, as transformers of income into goods and services – visible in the household unit. Findings from nine empirical studies are presented, examining resource distribution in relation to the composition of households, and the life cycles and life experiences of household members. A wide variety of household types is considered, and attention is given to households undergoing changes (such as divorce and unemployment) that are likely to have major implications for household structure and resources.

The implications of these innovative and thought-provoking studies for social policy are considerable, with relevance to the fields of inequality and income support, the provision of care for children and the elderly, the labour market and divorce law. This book will still appeal to practising researchers and students in the social sciences, particularly women’s studies.