Globally, paid care work, such as care for children or the elderly is a fast-growing sector of the market economy. Yet, it remains undervalued by governments and citizens in both monetary and societal terms which has damaging implications for women’s economic empowerment and gender relations more broadly. In order to shape new political responses to the Sustainable Development Goal 5’s targets on unpaid care and domestic work, it is critical to make the connections between paid and unpaid care work and its impact on gender equality and women’s rights. Without reinforcing care work as ‘women’s work’, such responses should promote decent work for women and men in the care sector, invest in care workers, and acknowledge the global dimension o...
This broad based consultation is part of work undertaken by the Growth and Economic Opportunities fo...
The gender equality agenda has long discussed the unequal burden of care work for women and girls. B...
This paper contextualizes and reviews recent research on unpaid care work in the Global South, with ...
The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development of 2015, endorsed by the United Nations, details 17 Sust...
Globally, women perform the great majority of unpaid care work. This unjust distribution of labour ...
It is widely known that women’s economic empowerment can lead to economic growth. However, it is im...
Women mainly provide family care, but as women’s economic opportunities increase they will not conti...
At the end of September 2015, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) will be launched. Building on...
Women make significant, unrecognised contributions to local economies, and to economic deve...
The need to increase women’s labour market participation and economic security is on the ‘to do’ lis...
Women’s rights and children’s rights directly influence each other, yet there have been few success...
Also available at www.unrisd.org/publications/rpb9eCare work, both paid and unpaid, contributes to w...
This article focuses on women – a sector that has been disproportionately affected by the COVID-19 p...
The family, within which unpaid care work is carried out mostly by women, is again an important topi...
The family, within which unpaid care work is carried out mostly by women, is again an important topi...
This broad based consultation is part of work undertaken by the Growth and Economic Opportunities fo...
The gender equality agenda has long discussed the unequal burden of care work for women and girls. B...
This paper contextualizes and reviews recent research on unpaid care work in the Global South, with ...
The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development of 2015, endorsed by the United Nations, details 17 Sust...
Globally, women perform the great majority of unpaid care work. This unjust distribution of labour ...
It is widely known that women’s economic empowerment can lead to economic growth. However, it is im...
Women mainly provide family care, but as women’s economic opportunities increase they will not conti...
At the end of September 2015, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) will be launched. Building on...
Women make significant, unrecognised contributions to local economies, and to economic deve...
The need to increase women’s labour market participation and economic security is on the ‘to do’ lis...
Women’s rights and children’s rights directly influence each other, yet there have been few success...
Also available at www.unrisd.org/publications/rpb9eCare work, both paid and unpaid, contributes to w...
This article focuses on women – a sector that has been disproportionately affected by the COVID-19 p...
The family, within which unpaid care work is carried out mostly by women, is again an important topi...
The family, within which unpaid care work is carried out mostly by women, is again an important topi...
This broad based consultation is part of work undertaken by the Growth and Economic Opportunities fo...
The gender equality agenda has long discussed the unequal burden of care work for women and girls. B...
This paper contextualizes and reviews recent research on unpaid care work in the Global South, with ...