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The Gender Division of Welfare
The Impact of the British and German Welfare States

This book, first published in 2000, compares gender, social equality and welfare issues in Britain and Germany.

Mary Daly (Author)

9780521626217, Cambridge University Press

Paperback, published 9 May 2000

284 pages, 8 b/w illus. 38 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.5 cm, 0.38 kg

"This book will be of interest to welfare state scholars seeking recent and well-informed observations from the feminist perspective" Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare Dec 2001

The Gender Division of Welfare, first published in 2000, is an ambitious study that raises interesting and important questions concerning the relationship between welfare states, gender differentiation and social inequality. The book traces the consequences of different welfare state and social policy arrangements for women and men and the households in which they live. Mary Daly examines the British and German welfare states showing that both countries differ markedly in the measures they have instituted in various areas. These include the support of families with children, as well as policies established for the provision of care for the ill and aged. The author investigates how each of these hugely influential welfare state models affect financial relations between women and men and the extent to which women and men can participate in the labour market and the family.

1. Theory on the welfare state: the place of gender?
2. A framework for analysing the gender dimension of welfare states
3. The British and German welfare states and the support of family and gender roles
4. Sex, gender and the distributive principles of cash transfer systems
5. Income inequality and resource-based relations
6. Sex, gender and poverty
7. Marriage, wellbeing and women's economic risks
8. Welfare states and gender divisions.

Subject Areas: Social welfare & social services [JKS]

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