Caring for America: Home Health Workers in the Shadow of the Welfare State
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Cited by:
- Danielle Docka‐Filipek & Lindsey B. Stone, 2021. "Twice a “housewife”: On academic precarity, “hysterical” women, faculty mental health, and service as gendered care work for the “university family” in pandemic times," Gender, Work and Organization, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 28(6), pages 2158-2179, November.
- Goldberg, Harmony., 2015. "The long journey home : the contested exclusion and inclusion of domestic workers from federal wage and hour protections in the United States," ILO Working Papers 994878543402676, International Labour Organization.
- Dukes, Ruth & Streeck, Wolfgang, 2020. "From industrial citizenship to private ordering? Contract, status, and the question of consent," MPIfG Discussion Paper 20/13, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies.
- Atticus Maddox & Lynette Mackenzie, 2022. "Occupational Violence Experienced by Care Workers in the Australian Home Care Sector When Assisting People with Dementia," IJERPH, MDPI, vol. 20(1), pages 1-18, December.
- Louise Birdsell Bauer & Cynthia Cranford, 2017. "The community dimensions of union renewal: racialized and caring relations in personal support services," Work, Employment & Society, British Sociological Association, vol. 31(2), pages 302-318, April.
- Amy Horton, 2022. "Financialization and non-disposable women: Real estate, debt and labour in UK care homes," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 54(1), pages 144-159, February.
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