Achieving Gender Equality through Paid and Unpaid Work: An Exploration of Mothers’ Perspectives on Work
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Work and Motherhood as Society Structuring Factors
1.2. Literature Review
1.2.1. Separation of Paid and Unpaid Work and Gender Inequality
1.2.2. The Glorification of Paid Work and the Devaluation of Unpaid Work
1.2.3. Male Standards of Work and the Demand for Equality through Paid Work
1.2.4. The Implicit Dual Role of Women and the Structural Disadvantages of Working Mothers
2. Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Procedures
2.3. Instrument
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Findings
3.1. Criteria to Determine What Is Work from the Mothers’ Perspective
“I would also consider work as something determined by others. So, if I wasn’t working now, I would think about what I wanted to do. And that means I wouldn’t be in the office and I wouldn’t be with the children”.(J)
“Money is important so that I can live, that I can be healthy, but otherwise…”.(C)
3.2. Standards in Relation to Work and Motherhood
3.2.1. Clashing Standards of Work and Motherhood
“‘A good mother is one who works as if she did not have children and looks after her children as if she did not work’”.(R)
“The expectation from your workplace is that you are completely available, no matter what is happening at home”.(Y)
“Everyday life is often quite stressful. So every morning is a rush, every morning you find you haven’t slept enough, you have to rush to drop the children off somewhere, you have to go to work and have to get something done quickly, then you’re off again”.(Y)
“Both of us struggle just to get something or the minimum that we want from life, and stress ourselves out every day going to work. And you only do the minimum because you don’t have the energy to do more, at home either”.(Y)
“What I couldn’t have imagined is how little time you have for everything. […] that there isn’t enough time for anything”.(Y)
3.2.2. Should a Mother Be Doing Paid Work or Not?
“The more you earn, the better [more highly valued] your work is”.(C)
3.2.3. What Is a “Good” Workload?
“It is very different, some find 60 percent […] incredibly much and others find it little”.(R)
“So you live in a society and you have to deal with the given conditions and […] you don’t have the option of deciding against these conditions, […] and that’s what annoys me about the discourse, that they always act as if there are choices. The choices are incredibly limited.”.(R)
3.2.4. How Do the Mothers Perceive Domestic Work?
“My friends and I and many other women do not feel the need to be relieved of this work, they would like to have more time and space for this work”.(D)
“I would like to do this [domestic] work or some of it and I want the conditions that make this possible without me then being poor because of it”.(D)
3.2.5. How Are Stay-at-Home Mothers Thought of?
3.3. Mothers’ Wishes: What Do the Working Mothers Want in Their Cultural Context of Western Privilege?
“And for me it’s not so much about either-or, because I like to do everything. For me it would be about creating space to be able to do it side by side”.(R)
4. Discussion
4.1. The Adoption of the Male Model as a Source of Inequality
4.2. The Need for the Coexistence of Work and Family Models
5. Conclusions
6. Future Research
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- Attachment
- Interview guide: “Mothers and Work”
- Introductory question
- Q0. Can you briefly introduce yourself and your family?
- Introduction: Everyday life and definition of work
- Q1. What kind of work do you do in a typical working week?
- -
- Ask if not mentioned:
- ○
- Are there any other activities you do that you would describe as work?
- Q2. What does work mean to you?
- -
- Ask if not mentioned:
- ○
- Do you also perceive activities for which you are not paid as work? Why (not)?
- Q3. What arrangement/family model do you and your partner have today?
- -
- Ask if not mentioned:
- ○
- How did you come to be doing paid work?
- ○
- To what extent did your environment (i.e., your partner, friends, work colleagues, family etc.) play a role in this decision (e.g., influence by their opinions or family models)?
- ○
- How did your arrangement/family model evolve (e.g., as the children got older)?
- Q4. How important are the different activities to you?
- -
- Ask if not mentioned:
- ○
- What is important to you in relation to work (money, time, meaning, etc.)? Why?
- ○
- What value do you place on activities for which you are not paid?
- Evaluation of one’s own work situation
- Q5. How satisfied/dissatisfied are you with your activities/the way you organise your daily life?
- -
- Ask if not mentioned:
- ○
- Why are you so satisfied/dissatisfied?
- Q6. You are doing paid work and at the same time you are also responsible for household/family chores: How do you feel about this coexistence?
- -
- Specify if necessary:
- ○
- What do you find difficult, what do you appreciate?
- ○
- How is it for you that you are paid for your employment and not for work at home?
- Q7. Are there things you would do differently?
- -
- Specify if necessary:
- ○
- What would have to change for you to be more satisfied with your situation?
- ○
- What or who is preventing you from making a change?
- Social standards in relation to work
- Q8. What do you answer when people ask you about your profession/work?
- -
- Enquiries:
- ○
- How is it that you answer like that?
- ○
- How do people react to your answer?
- Q9. How does your environment react to your working life/your life plan?
- -
- Ask if not mentioned:
- ○
- What kind of expectations or standards in relation to work do you see yourself confronted with in your environment?
- Q10. What do you yourself think about these opinions/expectations of your environment?
- -
- Ask if not mentioned:
- ○
- Do you feel that the opinions (regarding work and family) in your environment influence you? In what way?
- Q11. Do you sometimes wish that the topic of work and motherhood was looked at/approached differently in society?
- Q12. Is there anything else you would like to add?
1 | Additionally, studies such as Fuchs et al. (2021) and Lanfranconi et al. (2021) for Switzerland as well as Espartinez (2023) for the Philippines, Olga et al. (2020) for Kazakhstan and Farré et al. (2020, p. 1) for Spain showed that “the COVID-19 crisis appears to have increased gender inequalities in both paid and unpaid work, in the short-term” in many countries. |
2 | Even if one does not take into account the unpaid work in sports clubs, interest groups, cultural associations, political parties and municipalities (Madörin 2010a, p. 98). |
3 | Demands for female full-time employment are currently being voiced, e.g., in discussions about the financial disadvantages that arise for mothers in their old age due to having made insufficient pension fund payments during their many years of part-time employment. |
4 | Hiring paid domestic and care help costs too much for many families: according to estimates in the UNRISD research report, half of the women in Switzerland earn too little per hour to cover the cost of one hour of outside care for children or sick people (Madörin 2010a, p. 103). Additionally, if families have the financial means, they usually resort to female domestic helpers (mostly migrant women), which still leaves domestic work in the hands of women (Huber 2006, p. 22; Hirsch 2016, p. 40; cf. Lutz 2010). |
5 | According to Helfferich, 6 to 30 interviews is a “medium” sample size (Helfferich 2011, p. 173). Considering the exploratory nature of this research, only eight mothers were interviewed, all from a homogenous context (white, living in Switzerland with a partner, middle-class, heterosexual cis women, working part-time in a paid job). |
6 | The initials refer to the respective mothers. |
7 | Interestingly, according to some of the interviewed mothers, fathers were held to a different standard than mothers with regard to domestic and care work. While it was taken for granted that mothers did this work, fathers were praised for it (J, S, M). |
8 | At this point, it has to be emphasised once again that it is different for many working mothers in Switzerland: many families rely on two incomes to support their families (cf. Crettaz 2018). |
9 | The word housewife (German: Hausfrau) was used by the interviewed mothers to reflect the stigma they felt for staying at home part-time. In German, this word has a somewhat negative connotation. |
10 | Forty-two hours per week for full-time. |
11 | According to Hirsch, “participation in paid work” is often seen exclusively “as a gain in female freedom”, since dependence on a male family breadwinner is removed (Hirsch 2016, p. 147). The fact that this dependence is replaced by a new dependence, namely wage dependence, is pushed into the background (ibid., p. 158). |
12 | It is not only the case that the mothers each have different attitudes, different ideals and ideas “also exist within” the mothers—as König has shown (König 2012, pp. 91–92). |
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Themes (Umbrella Concepts) | Codes (Concepts of Mothers’ Narratives) | Sub-Themes (Patterns of Experiences) |
---|---|---|
Criteria to define work | Joy | Joy |
Heteronomy | External determination vs. Self-determination | |
Self-determination | ||
Pay | Pay | |
Liberation | Liberation, Self-realisation and Recognition | |
Self-realisation | ||
Recognition | ||
Professionalism | Professionalism and Expertise | |
Expertise | ||
Environment standards in relation to work and motherhood | Superwoman | Clashing standards of work and motherhood |
Bad mother | ||
Daycare centers | ||
Dealing with expectations | ||
Demarcation | ||
Paid work | Should a mother be doing paid work or not? | |
Education | ||
Money | ||
Full-time or high workload | What is a “good” workload? | |
Part-time | ||
Father vs. Mother | ||
Domestic work | How do the mothers perceived domestic work? | |
Childcare | ||
Unpaid work | ||
Wages for domestic work | ||
Maternity leave | ||
Stay-at-home mothers | How are stay-at-home mothers thought of? | |
Mothers’ wishes for their working lives | Different household division of labour | Create space for paid and unpaid work |
Shorter working hours | ||
Cleaning lady | ||
Lower workload for the husband | ||
Part-time work easier | ||
Compatibility | ||
More flexible child care | Enable families to make decisions free from economic coercion | |
Freedom | ||
Equality | ||
Help from the partner | ||
More money | ||
More realistic image of parenthood | ||
Structures | ||
Delivery service | ||
Less pay inequality | ||
More money for the care sector | Valuing unpaid work | |
Social appreciation | ||
Wage for housework | ||
To make unpaid work visible | ||
Time as a whole family | More time for domestic work and the family or for themselves | |
Time for housework | ||
Time for yourself | ||
Time with children | ||
Time with partner | ||
Longer maternity leave | ||
More holidays | ||
Paternity leave | ||
To be able to be at home | ||
Valuing motherhood | Listen to mothers | |
Listen to mothers |
Themes | Sub-Themes | Example Quotes |
---|---|---|
3.1. Criteria to determine what is work from the mothers’ perspective | Joy | “On the other hand, cooking, cleaning, shopping, tidying up, that’s what I would call work, because I just don’t like doing it, I’ve never liked doing it and that’s not going to change (laughs).” (Y) “I don’t find cooking and baking to be work. That’s something that brings me a lot of joy.” (S) |
External determination vs. self-determination | “Well, I would also consider work as something externally determined. So if I wasn’t working now, I would think about what I wanted to do. So that means I wouldn’t be in the office and I wouldn’t be with the children.” (J) | |
Pay | “If you earn money for it, it is already work, it is paid work, something is asked of you, you don’t have all the freedom you want, you have to do what they say.” (Y) “I also enjoy my work incredibly much, but first and foremost it’s about the money, about earning something.” (K) | |
Liberation, self-realisation and recognition | “But I have to say that even with children there are days when not everything is just nice, but I think it’s precisely because I can go to work in between that I look forward to this everyday life again, where at the end of the day you don’t somehow get a thank you or praise or some kind of recognition (laughs), but something… yes, something else… a different kind of fulfilled day.” (M) | |
Professionalism and expertise | “For me, the office is the place where I am competent. […] I’m much overchallenged at home, simply with situations, because there’s always something new and I don’t know what the right thing is, and then I have to decide something […] and I don’t have that in the office. I feel much more competent in the office than at home.” (J) | |
3.2. Standards in relation to work and motherhood | 3.2.1. Clashing standards of work and motherhood | “‘A good mother is one who works as if she did not have children and looks after her children as if she did not work.’” (R) |
3.2.2. Should a mother be doing paid work or not? | “So the job where you earn money has a much higher status in society. [… ] Well, I think there are two kinds of work, one is work where you earn money, as much as possible, the more you earn, the better the work. […] And the other one, voluntary work or doing something for which you don’t earn any money, it’s either smiled at or you hear ‘You are such a good person for doing this’.” (C) “I’m the only one [in the family] who went to university. And I think they thought it [her education] was expensive enough, it will be okay if she continues to go to the office.” (J) | |
3.2.3. What is a “good” workload? | “I don’t feel it is desirable at all to work full-time, I really don’t.” (R) “It is very different, some find 60 per cent […] incredibly much and others find it little.” (R) | |
3.2.4. How do the mothers perceive domestic work? | “My friends and I and many other women do not feel the need to be relieved of this work, they would like to have more time and space for this work.” (D) | |
3.2.5. How are stay-at-home mothers thought of? | “I couldn’t imagine that, after one day I would go crazy if I was only at home, I would find that so so boring.” (S) “I think it’s basically nice when a woman can stand on her own two feet, because you never know how it will turn out, so… But I don’t condemn anyone who does it this way or that way, I think everything has its justification.” (M) | |
3.3. Mothers’ wishes: What do the working mothers want? | Space for paid and unpaid work | “And for me it’s not so much about absolutes, because I like to do everything. For me it would be about creating space to be able to do it side by side.” (R) |
Family decisions free from economic coercion | “Who gets paternity leave paid by their employer, almost no one. The progress or the change in thinking is simply not there yet, it’s still like that, everything stays with the mother somehow. […] I would like to see it shared more like that, for both of them. That both have a right to stay at home or that the company doesn’t make it so difficult for the men, maybe.” (K) | |
Valuing unpaid work | “You pay so much money as you have to take care of everything [family, children], that has been your private decision, but that children are needed for a society for a pension fund or a future, that it’s actually still good for everyone if there are a few children here in Switzerland. I think that’s missing a bit, that it serves everyone and is not just an expensive hobby for a few people who find it fun to have a few children.” (Y) | |
More time for domestic work and the family or for themselves | “I think I would work less myself, and the hours I do work, I would work more with the children. Doing less paid work doesn’t mean filling up all the hours with the children, but I would also like to have a bit of free time […] there has to be room for that. So more free time, more time, more working time with the children, without less money, actually I need even more money.” (D) | |
Listen to mothers | “I would like mothers to be listened to and for them to be taken seriously.” (R) |
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Madörin, S.; Jacinto, S. Achieving Gender Equality through Paid and Unpaid Work: An Exploration of Mothers’ Perspectives on Work. Soc. Sci. 2023, 12, 218. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12040218
Madörin S, Jacinto S. Achieving Gender Equality through Paid and Unpaid Work: An Exploration of Mothers’ Perspectives on Work. Social Sciences. 2023; 12(4):218. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12040218
Chicago/Turabian StyleMadörin, Sarah, and Sofia Jacinto. 2023. "Achieving Gender Equality through Paid and Unpaid Work: An Exploration of Mothers’ Perspectives on Work" Social Sciences 12, no. 4: 218. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12040218
APA StyleMadörin, S., & Jacinto, S. (2023). Achieving Gender Equality through Paid and Unpaid Work: An Exploration of Mothers’ Perspectives on Work. Social Sciences, 12(4), 218. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12040218