Women's Work in Rural Ecuador: Multiple Resource Strategies and the Gendered Division of Labor

Author(s):  
Lauris McKee
Author(s):  
Ruth Milkman

This chapter examines the sexual division of labor in the automobile industry during World War II to find out whether job segregation by gender had been dismantled during the war. It begins with a discussion of “women's work” in the auto industry in the prewar period and goes on to explore how the idiom of sex-typing of occupations was implemented and readjusted in the face of a dramatic change in the economic constraints on the sexual division of labor, along with the ensuing political struggles over the redefinition of the boundaries between “women's work” and “men's work.” It then considers the ambiguity and labor–management conflict over “women's work,” the various exclusionary tactics employed by male auto workers against women, and the disputes over the question of equal pay in the industry during the war. It also discusses the process through which war factories reproduced new patterns of job segregation by sex in the industry, instead of eliminating it.


2019 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 277-314
Author(s):  
Neiva Furlin

Este artigo analisa narrativas de mulheres (casadas e freiras) que atuam na docência superior em teologia católica, e pretende evidenciar como elas circulam entre a profissão e os trabalhos domésticos, naturalizados como femininos. PALAVRAS-CHAVE: Divisão sexual do trabalho. Docência superior. Desigualdade de gênero. Profissão..   ABSTRACT This article analyzes narratives of women (married and nuns) who teach Catholic theology at a college level and aims to show how they circulate between their profession and housework, culturally considered women’s work. KEYWORDS: Sexual division of labor. Higher education teaching. Gender inequality. Profession


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