Homecare is a major source of women’s low-wage employment in the UK. Practices of unpaid working time are widespread and many workers are not paid in accordance with their existing national minimum wage entitlements. On 1 April 2015, a new duty of well-being in social care came into force and local authorities are required to promote the control of care by service-users. As a consequence, homecare workers will increasingly be engaged in complex multi-lateral work relations and subject to multi-party control. This article examines how the national minimum wage entitlements of homecare workers have been legally interpreted and questions if their entitlements might be adversely affected under provisions of the Care Act 2014. There is a legacy ...
My current research focuses on gaps in UK law which exclude women in precarious work from using work...
Austerity places intense pressures on labour costs in paid care. In the UK, electronic monitoring te...
This chapter explores the electronic monitoring (EM) of homecare in the context of the local authori...
Homecare is a major source of women’s low-wage employment in the UK. Practices of unpaid working tim...
Homecare is a major source of women’s low-wage employment in the UK. Practices of unpaid working tim...
It is undoubtingly noticeable that care workers' employment rights are currently prominent in the ne...
This brief examines overtime hours and hourly wages among home care workers (home health aides and p...
Austerity places intense pressures on labour costs in paid care. In the UK, electronic monitoring te...
The dynamics of minimum wage increases vary across industries based on each industry’s specific stru...
In Stories of care: a labour of law, Lydia Hayes argues that the UK’s crisis of social care is a pro...
This chapter suggests that the vulnerability of "community" is impacted by the gendering of labor la...
Informal employment continues to exist in parallel with formal employment among the U.S. home-based ...
This article explores the use of Electronic Monitoring (EM) in homecare and its impact on the ratio ...
The aging of the population in the U.S. and elsewhere raises important questions about who will prov...
Between 1985 to 2014 the number of people aged 85 and above doubled from nearly 700,000 to 1.5 milli...
My current research focuses on gaps in UK law which exclude women in precarious work from using work...
Austerity places intense pressures on labour costs in paid care. In the UK, electronic monitoring te...
This chapter explores the electronic monitoring (EM) of homecare in the context of the local authori...
Homecare is a major source of women’s low-wage employment in the UK. Practices of unpaid working tim...
Homecare is a major source of women’s low-wage employment in the UK. Practices of unpaid working tim...
It is undoubtingly noticeable that care workers' employment rights are currently prominent in the ne...
This brief examines overtime hours and hourly wages among home care workers (home health aides and p...
Austerity places intense pressures on labour costs in paid care. In the UK, electronic monitoring te...
The dynamics of minimum wage increases vary across industries based on each industry’s specific stru...
In Stories of care: a labour of law, Lydia Hayes argues that the UK’s crisis of social care is a pro...
This chapter suggests that the vulnerability of "community" is impacted by the gendering of labor la...
Informal employment continues to exist in parallel with formal employment among the U.S. home-based ...
This article explores the use of Electronic Monitoring (EM) in homecare and its impact on the ratio ...
The aging of the population in the U.S. and elsewhere raises important questions about who will prov...
Between 1985 to 2014 the number of people aged 85 and above doubled from nearly 700,000 to 1.5 milli...
My current research focuses on gaps in UK law which exclude women in precarious work from using work...
Austerity places intense pressures on labour costs in paid care. In the UK, electronic monitoring te...
This chapter explores the electronic monitoring (EM) of homecare in the context of the local authori...