This article links theoretical work on time and gender to a case study of community-based midwives in the British National Health Service in England. While it rejects universalism or essentialism, the article argues that continuing social differences make it meaningful to talk about ‘women's time’ (cyclical, qualitative, relational, and natural time, particularly associated with private life and care) and ‘men's time’ (linear, quantitative, commodified, and clock time, particularly associated with the capitalist workplace). It also argues that gendered time cultures are bound up with gender differences in power. The case study finds that midwives experience a damaging clash between hegemonic ‘men's time’ and the time needs of women. It a...
In this article, we examine the impact on midwifery practice of clinical governance in the UK with i...
This article examines how debates surrounding the practice and development of maternity care in Engl...
© 2016 Dr. Danielle Deanne NockoldsThis thesis explores two key areas of scholarship in the sociolog...
This paper tests some theoretical claims about the gendered experience of time against a case-study ...
Many feminists see inequalities in time use as a key aspect of male privilege and female disadvantag...
Time has recently been described as ‘feminism’s latent concept’1. It might also be seen as the laten...
Policies concerning time use are crucial to parents' experiences of paid and unpaid work and the rec...
Background: poor relationships between maternity care professionals still contribute to poor outcome...
Women's increased role in the labour market has combined with concerns about the damaging effects of...
Background: poor relationships between maternity care professionals still contribute to poor outcome...
Business ethics researchers and practitioners are interested in understanding the temporal mechanism...
Business ethics researchers and practitioners are interested in understanding the temporal mechanism...
Women are increasingly allocating time to the paid workforce, but there hasnot been a corresponding ...
In this paper, I analyze how different didactic discourses surrounding pregnancy, birth, and postpar...
This article investigates the time use and consciousness of a group of housewives wor...
In this article, we examine the impact on midwifery practice of clinical governance in the UK with i...
This article examines how debates surrounding the practice and development of maternity care in Engl...
© 2016 Dr. Danielle Deanne NockoldsThis thesis explores two key areas of scholarship in the sociolog...
This paper tests some theoretical claims about the gendered experience of time against a case-study ...
Many feminists see inequalities in time use as a key aspect of male privilege and female disadvantag...
Time has recently been described as ‘feminism’s latent concept’1. It might also be seen as the laten...
Policies concerning time use are crucial to parents' experiences of paid and unpaid work and the rec...
Background: poor relationships between maternity care professionals still contribute to poor outcome...
Women's increased role in the labour market has combined with concerns about the damaging effects of...
Background: poor relationships between maternity care professionals still contribute to poor outcome...
Business ethics researchers and practitioners are interested in understanding the temporal mechanism...
Business ethics researchers and practitioners are interested in understanding the temporal mechanism...
Women are increasingly allocating time to the paid workforce, but there hasnot been a corresponding ...
In this paper, I analyze how different didactic discourses surrounding pregnancy, birth, and postpar...
This article investigates the time use and consciousness of a group of housewives wor...
In this article, we examine the impact on midwifery practice of clinical governance in the UK with i...
This article examines how debates surrounding the practice and development of maternity care in Engl...
© 2016 Dr. Danielle Deanne NockoldsThis thesis explores two key areas of scholarship in the sociolog...