Gendered Labor Market (dis)advantages in Nordic Welfare States : Introduction to the Theme of the Special Issue
Mustosmäki, A., Reisel, L., Sihto, T., & Teigen, M. (2021). Gendered Labor Market (dis)advantages in Nordic Welfare States : Introduction to the Theme of the Special Issue. Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies, 11(S7), 1-9. https://doi.org/10.18291/njwls.132537
Published in
Nordic Journal of Working Life StudiesDate
2021Discipline
Ikääntymisen ja hoivan tutkimuksen huippuyksikköYhteiskuntapolitiikkaHyvinvoinnin tutkimuksen yhteisöCentre of Excellence in Research on Ageing and CareSocial and Public PolicySchool of WellbeingCopyright
© 2021 Authors and Journal
Gender equality has been named as one of the normative foundations of Nordic wel- fare states. This is reflected in how, year after year, Nordic states rank among the most gender egalitarian countries in the world (see, e.g., World Economic Forum 2020). In Nordic countries, the state has been, and continues to be, a central actor in shaping women’s citizenship, labor market opportunities, and caring roles. Especially publicly funded welfare services and policies that facilitate the reconciliation of work and care have played a major part in advancing women’s labor market participation (see, e.g., Bergquist et al. 1999; Borchorst & Siim 2002; Ellingsæter & Leira 2006; Siim & Stoltz 2015). The institutional framework of Nordic welfare state policies has been central to what has been called the ‘social democratic public service route’ (Walby 2004).
One of the important building blocks of gender equality has been the aim of making policies in Nordic countries ‘women-friendly’. More than 30 years ago, Helga Hernes (1987) identified the Nordic countries as ‘potentially women-friendly societies’. She characterized women-friendly societies as those that ‘would not force harder choices on women than on men’ (ibid., 15), particularly in relation to work and care. Hernes also envisaged that woman-friendliness should be achieved without increasing other forms of inequality, such as class or ethnicity-based inequalities among different groups of women.
However, achieving gender equality in working life and the sort of women- friendliness that Hernes envisaged at the societal level has in many ways also proved to be challenging, as the ties between the state and gender equality goals are more complex than what they might seem at first glance. Gender disparities have proven persistent also within the Nordic context. When we issued a call for this special issue, we were interested in various forms of gendered labor market (dis)advantage in Nordic countries. Furthermore, we asked how gender segregation, welfare state policies, labor market
policies, and various labor market actors interact to produce, maintain, challenge, or change gender equality in the labor market in the Nordic countries and beyond. The five articles presented in this special issue address the issue of gendered labor market (dis)advantages in Nordic countries from several vantage points, focusing on both on ‘traditional’ questions, such as corporate power and sustainable employment, and ‘emerging’ questions such as intersectionality, gender culture, and aesthetic work.
...
Publisher
VIA University CollegeISSN Search the Publication Forum
2245-0157Keywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/101782681
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
How bright are the Nordic Lights? : job quality trends in Nordic countries in a comparative perspective
Mustosmäki, Armi (University of Jyväskylä, 2017)Nordic countries stand out from the rest of the Europe in terms of job quality. Comparative research literature sought to explain the distinctiveness of Nordic countries with diverse sets of institutional frameworks. ... -
Choice models in nordic long-term care : care managers' experiences of privilege and disadvantage among older adults
Erlandsson, Sara; Brodin, Helene; Graff, Lea; Karsio, Olli (Springer, 2022)Consumer choice models have been introduced in eldercare services in several Western welfare societies. Choice models in eldercare emphasise the importance of individuals’ abilities to make informed choices and therefore ... -
Conforming to and resisting imposed identities : An autoethnography on academic motherhood
Krysa, Isabella; Kivijärvi, Marke (Emerald, 2022)Purpose This research attempts to make sense of the experiences of two academic women who become mothers. Design/methodology/approach This paper is an autoethnography. Applying the autoethnographic method allows ... -
Gendered Work-life Ideologies among IT Professionals
Heikkinen, Suvi; Kivijärvi, Marke (Routledge, Taylor & Francis, 2022)The study investigates the discourses IT professionals use to produce work–life relations. We focus on work–life ideologies and explore the agencies produced, as well as whether and how they are gendered. Our data were ... -
Introduction : spaces of upset in the Nordic region
Salö, Linus; Karlander, David; Leppänen, Sirpa; Westinen, Elina; Spindler Møller, Janus (Walter de Gruyter GmbH, 2022)This introductory article opens the thematic issue Spaces of Upset in the Nordic Region. It introduces the contributions of the issue, outlines the concepts that unite them, and discusses the sociolinguistic area in which ...