The gendered impact of caring responsibilities on parents' experiences of working in the film and television Caring responsibilities are often cited as a key reason for continuing gendered inequalities across the film and television sector (Wreyford, 2018; Wing-Fai et al, 2015; Creative Scotland, 2016; Raising Films, 2016). However, there is little detailed analysis of precisely how caring responsibilities impact upon parents' experiences of work in this field. Further, in a context in which women are disproportionately affected by caring responsibilities, it is not surprising that existing studies on the issue of care have tended to focus exclusively on women and motherhood. This female centricity risks replicating the essentialist notion ...
In a case study of Irish television, gendered production processes are created through the channeli...
Understanding the conditions that facilitate mothers’ employment and fathers’ involvement in childca...
This article concerns gendered sustainability of careers in the UK TV industry. Much academic scruti...
The gendered impact of caring responsibilities on parents' experiences of working in the film and te...
The gendered impact of caring responsibilities on parents' experiences of working in the film and te...
This article explores parents' published accounts of their (gendered) experiences of reconciling car...
This article explores parents' published accounts of their (gendered) experiences of reconciling car...
Australian cinema is replete with films that feature absent mothers, and it is no different on the o...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis Changes globally mean that there are now record numbers of mothers in paid e...
YesChanges globally mean that there are now record numbers of mothers in paid employment and a repor...
There is one clear factor that leads to women's inequality in the labour market: "becoming mothers" ...
Paid work is generally accepted as an important dimension of hegemonic masculinities and men's ident...
Childcare is a set of practices laden with gender and other inequalities, as it is constructed on th...
The pervasiveness of gender inequality in the media and entertainment industry has become an issue o...
Funded by the Nuffield Foundation, this 3-year project seeks to identify routes and barriers to grea...
In a case study of Irish television, gendered production processes are created through the channeli...
Understanding the conditions that facilitate mothers’ employment and fathers’ involvement in childca...
This article concerns gendered sustainability of careers in the UK TV industry. Much academic scruti...
The gendered impact of caring responsibilities on parents' experiences of working in the film and te...
The gendered impact of caring responsibilities on parents' experiences of working in the film and te...
This article explores parents' published accounts of their (gendered) experiences of reconciling car...
This article explores parents' published accounts of their (gendered) experiences of reconciling car...
Australian cinema is replete with films that feature absent mothers, and it is no different on the o...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis Changes globally mean that there are now record numbers of mothers in paid e...
YesChanges globally mean that there are now record numbers of mothers in paid employment and a repor...
There is one clear factor that leads to women's inequality in the labour market: "becoming mothers" ...
Paid work is generally accepted as an important dimension of hegemonic masculinities and men's ident...
Childcare is a set of practices laden with gender and other inequalities, as it is constructed on th...
The pervasiveness of gender inequality in the media and entertainment industry has become an issue o...
Funded by the Nuffield Foundation, this 3-year project seeks to identify routes and barriers to grea...
In a case study of Irish television, gendered production processes are created through the channeli...
Understanding the conditions that facilitate mothers’ employment and fathers’ involvement in childca...
This article concerns gendered sustainability of careers in the UK TV industry. Much academic scruti...