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E-raamat: Right to Care?: Unpaid Work in European Employment Law

(Senior Lecturer in Law, University of Stirling)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Oxford Labour Law
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Apr-2011
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191621437
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Oxford Labour Law
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Apr-2011
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191621437

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A Right to Care? considers the reconciliation of unpaid care and paid work which is among the most pressing and difficult problems currently facing employment law. The incompatibility of carers needs and the demands of the labor market is commonly identified in relation to working mothers, but is by no means confined to this group as dependency for aspects of personal care can arise as a result of disability, illness or aging. In all of its forms, unpaid care is predominantly provided by women so that its intersection with paid work is severely gendered. In recent years European integration has focused on the need to increase employment rates whilst maintaining labor market flexibility. Many workers who seek to combine unpaid care with paid employment find themselves engaged in increasingly precarious forms of work, yet legal and policy responses have, to date, been reactive and incremental, resulting in a framework which is operationally ineffective in certain respects.Nicole Busby explores the potential for the development of a specific right to care within European employment law which would facilitate the reconciliation of these two central aspects of an individuals life and, in raising the status of care, would assist in the rebalancing of paid and unpaid work between men and women. The central premise is that the current constitutional and regulatory framework is in fact sufficiently flexible to take account of the diverse circumstances and resulting needs of working carers and that the European Court of Justice has the competence and capability to provide the necessary creativity to give effect to such a right. She argues that what is needed to instil coherence and consistency is a specific focus on unpaid work within European employment law, and provides a policy solution on how this should be brought about.

Arvustused

a rich and multi-disciplinary approah to the problem of the conflict between work and care. * Rikki Holtmaat, CML Rev. 2012 * This is a very welcome, important, and scholarly text. * Luke Clements, Journal of Law and Society *

Table of Cases
xiii
Table of Legislation
xvii
1 Unpaid Care and Paid Work in European Employment Law
1(16)
Introduction
1(1)
Aims of the Book
2(1)
Background to the Unpaid Care/Paid Work Conflict
2(1)
The Care Component of Labour Law
3(1)
The Liberal Foundations of EU Law
4(2)
The Gender Effect
6(1)
The Care Relationship
7(1)
Justifying a `Right' to Care
8(2)
The Conceptual Foundations of the Right to Care and European Union Law
10(1)
Scope and Structure of the Book
11(6)
2 Theoretical Perspectives on Work and Care
17(23)
Introduction
17(1)
The Place of Gender in the Unpaid Care/Paid Work Equation
18(1)
The Dichotomization of `Alternatives'
19(2)
A Woman's Place in the Social Contract
21(3)
Liberalism's Flaw: Concept or Conceptualization?
24(3)
Putting Distributive Justice into a Rights Framework
27(1)
Equal Treatment or Treatment as an Equal?
28(3)
Liberalism and the Feminist Challenge: Charting a Way Forward
31(2)
Using the Capabilities Approach to Construct a Right to Care
33(4)
Use of the CA as an Evaluative Framework
37(1)
Conclusion
38(2)
3 Paid Work and Unpaid Care: The Unsolved Conflict
40(26)
Introduction
40(1)
The Care Relationship
41(2)
Defining Care
43(3)
The Affective Dimension
46(2)
Caring for the Carer
48(2)
Unpaid Care in the European Labour Market
50(2)
The Nature of `Women's Work'
52(2)
Modelling Women's Labour Market Participation
54(2)
Explaining the Poor Quality of `Women's Work'
56(1)
Neo-classical Economics
57(2)
Human Capital Theory
59(2)
Segmented Labour Market Theory
61(3)
Conclusions
64(2)
4 Situating a Right to Care in European Employment Law
66(27)
Introduction
66(2)
A Hierarchy of Rights?
68(3)
The Role of Ideology in the Construction of Employment Law
71(1)
Form or Content?
72(3)
What Choices are the `Right' Choices?
75(2)
Implanting a Feminist Perspective in an Alternative Strategy
77(2)
Legal Intervention in the Employment Relationship
79(2)
The Commodification of Labour
81(3)
Situating a Right to Care within the European Employment Law Framework
84(1)
Pre-existing Authority for a Right to Care?
85(1)
Market Integration and the Right to Care
86(1)
Reflexive Law and the Capabilities Approach
87(3)
Conclusions
90(3)
5 European Union Law and Policy: Balancing Paid Employment and Unpaid Care within a Market Order
93(40)
Introduction
93(2)
The Development of Social Europe
95(6)
From Social Law to Employment Policy
101(4)
The Legislative Provisions: The Policy Context
105(3)
The EU's Anti-Discrimination Law and the Conception of Equality: Shifting or `Slippery'?
108(1)
The Recast Directive
109(5)
Family-based Rights
114(4)
The Pregnant Workers' Directive
114(2)
The Parental Leave Directive
116(2)
Ideological Incoherence
118(1)
Protection from Discrimination on the Grounds of Working Arrangements
119(4)
The Expression of Fundamental Rights in EU Law: The Constitutionalization of Norms
123(6)
Conclusions
129(4)
6 The Case Law of the Court of Justice of the European Union
133
Introduction
133(2)
The Court of Justice's Interpretive Methods: A Unique Institution?
135(4)
Motherhood and Parenting: The Dominant Ideology of the Court of Justice
139(6)
The Social Context of Atypical Work
145
Nicole Busby is a Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Stirling. She has a special interest in European Labour Law, in particular in the areas of sex equality and discrimination.