Options
Sánchez Mira, Núria
Résultat de la recherche
Diverging Destinies? A Long-term Outlook into Women’s Work and Gender Roles in Italy and Spain
2024-12, Sánchez Mira, Núria, Camilla Gaiaschi, Valeria Insarauto, Joan M. Verd
This article analyses how social and economic transformations over the last two decades have shaped women’s position in the work and family spheres in Italy and Spain, two countries often clustered together with other Southern European countries and yet exhibiting distinct features. Taking a long-term outlook, we discuss patterns of change of labour market indicators and gender-role attitudes during periods of economic growth, recession and recovery, to identify the implications of such changes for models of female socio-economic integration and gender equality issues in both countries. We show that the divergent trends have situated the two countries in significantly different positions. While Italy seems to be on a trajectory of continuity, with no significant change in female labour market integration, Spain shows a fundamental path-departure from the distinctive characteristics of the Southern model, with the 2008 economic downturn acting as a catalyst for change regarding women’s work and family roles.
Informal Employment Under the Skin: Informality and Health Inequalities Among Chilean Workers
2023, Marisol E. Ruiz, Mireia Bolibar, Sánchez Mira, Núria
Informal employment has been identified as an important social determinant of health. This article addresses the processes through which informal employment affects workers’ health in Chile. The study's methodological approach was based on qualitative interviews with 34 formal and informal workers. The findings show how workers perceive informal employment as negatively affecting their mental and physical health through different dimensions of their living and working conditions. Incorporating a gender perspective proves to be integral to the analysis of these processes. The article concludes by discussing how neoliberalism underlies such vulnerability processes and negatively impacts on the population's health.