Extended interviews with thirty seven experienced and student childcare providers in Vancouver, British Columbia, provide data for an analysis of the love/money dichotomy often used to understand work in childcare. Providers talked both about the pulls between "money" and "love " and about their desire for other rewards from their work. This article uses ideas of workplace democracy and feminist social justice theories to help articulate how childcare work can be understood and supported as good work. RÉSUMÉ De longues entrevues avec 37 étudiantes et travailleuses de garderie chevronnées à Vancouver, en Colombie- Britannique, fournissent les données nécessaires pour faire l'analyse de la dichotomie entre l'amou...
In Ontario, Canadaâ s licensed family child care system, there is a dissonance between expectations...
In 2000, 79 percent of married Canadian women between the ages of 25 and 44 were in the labour forc...
The increasing involvement of mothers in paid employment has brought attention to child care both as...
Extended interviews with thirty seven experienced and student childcare providers in Vancouver, Brit...
This research examines a range of differences among for-profit, non-profit, and cooperative childcar...
The home as a site for childcare is linked to notions of 'good' parenting, and the employment of a ...
This thesis examines how childcare work is impacted by patterns of value associated with social clas...
Today in Canada, child care is not perceived by the government, nor its citizenry, as a public good...
The operation of childcare centres for profit has long been a contentious issue in early childhood ...
This article examines the experiences of women who work in child care centres as care-givers. In rec...
This article examines the changing child care policy landscape in Canada, as indicative of the funda...
Child care has become a central feature of family life in the United States today, as our children s...
Abstract: This article brings together findings from two studies that focus on child care in Canada....
Child care enterprise can be a vehicle for community-based economic development. Beyond the critical...
This article explores the connection between child care, active labour market policies, and women's ...
In Ontario, Canadaâ s licensed family child care system, there is a dissonance between expectations...
In 2000, 79 percent of married Canadian women between the ages of 25 and 44 were in the labour forc...
The increasing involvement of mothers in paid employment has brought attention to child care both as...
Extended interviews with thirty seven experienced and student childcare providers in Vancouver, Brit...
This research examines a range of differences among for-profit, non-profit, and cooperative childcar...
The home as a site for childcare is linked to notions of 'good' parenting, and the employment of a ...
This thesis examines how childcare work is impacted by patterns of value associated with social clas...
Today in Canada, child care is not perceived by the government, nor its citizenry, as a public good...
The operation of childcare centres for profit has long been a contentious issue in early childhood ...
This article examines the experiences of women who work in child care centres as care-givers. In rec...
This article examines the changing child care policy landscape in Canada, as indicative of the funda...
Child care has become a central feature of family life in the United States today, as our children s...
Abstract: This article brings together findings from two studies that focus on child care in Canada....
Child care enterprise can be a vehicle for community-based economic development. Beyond the critical...
This article explores the connection between child care, active labour market policies, and women's ...
In Ontario, Canadaâ s licensed family child care system, there is a dissonance between expectations...
In 2000, 79 percent of married Canadian women between the ages of 25 and 44 were in the labour forc...
The increasing involvement of mothers in paid employment has brought attention to child care both as...