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Mothers On The Job: Maternity Policy in the U.S. Workplace

Autor Lise Vogel
en Limba Engleză Paperback – mar 1993
Women's increasing demands for protection and benefits in the workplace, especially with regard to maternity leave, have sparked more than a century of controversy among feminists on how best to serve the needs of working women. This debate continues to divide the feminist community. One side believes women are better served by emphasizing equality with men--pregnancy should be treated like any other "disability." The other side wants to recognize difference--special provisions should apply only to pregnant women. Lise Vogel examines the evolution of this debate on pregnant women in the workplace, looking at theoretical as well as practical implications.
Vogel begins by assessing the history of the contemporary debate on pregnancy policy in the U.S. Since the middle of the nineteenth-century, American women have been torn by the contradictory demands of motherhood and the workplace. Pregnancy was grounds for dismissal from work and few employers took action to protect pregnant workers. To counter this, early twentieth-century feminists and reformers emphasized female specificity and women's special role.
In the 1960s activists adopted a strategy framed on equality, which moved away from the earlier emphasis on differences. The use of equality strategies to cover the female-specific phenomenon of pregnancy turned out to have problems. Now women's special needs were denied and ignored. These difficulties and a series of court cases in the 1980s triggered debates in the feminist legal community. Vogel looks at the litigation and debates, which pitted advocates of gender-neutral strategies against critics who called for female-specific policies.
Vogel argues that, in terms of practical benefits, women will be served best by a gender-neutral approach to pregnancy policy. She encourages equality advocates to recognize the inherent diversity of individuals, and points out the need to be sensitive to individual factors of race and class, as well as sex.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780813519197
ISBN-10: 0813519195
Pagini: 216
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.31 kg
Ediția:None
Editura: Rutgers University Press
Colecția Rutgers University Press

Notă biografică

Lise Vogel is a professor of sociology at Rider College and the author of Marxism and the Oppression of Women (Rutgers University Press).

Cuprins

Acknowledgments

1. The Dilemma of Pregnancy Policy

2. Woman's Place
The Domestic Code
Equal Rights and Special Treatment
The Facts of Common Knowledge
A Class by Herself 
After Muller

3. Mothers at Work
Maternity Benefits
Motherhood as a Social Function
Motherhood as a Private Responsibility
A Two-Tier Policy

4. Feminism and Equality
True Equality and Real Protection
Sex, Race, and the Equality Framework
The Pregnancy Policy Puzzle
A New Solution

5. Difference in Court
Pregnancy Discrimination and the Supreme Court
Pregnancy Disability Legislation
Controversy in the Feminist Legal Community
Feminist Friends of the Court
The Justices Speak

6. Questioning Equality
Knots and Entanglements
Is Pregnancy So Different?

7. The Equality Framework Extended
The Pregnancy Discrimination Act and Women Workers
Familiy and Medical Leave Legislation

8. Difference as Strategy
So Great a Change
Strategizing for Justice
Female-Specific Policy and Twentieth-Century Politics

9. Beyond Equality versus Difference
A Radical Edge
The Critique of Equality
Toward a Politics of Diversity

10. Different but Not Unequal
Motherhood and Policy 
Differential Consideration

Notes
Index

Descriere

Women's increasing demands for protection and benefits in the workplace, especially with regard to maternity leave, have sparked more than a century of controversy among feminists on how best to serve the needs of working women. This debate continues to divide the feminist community. One side believes women are better served by emphasizing equality with men--pregnancy should be treated like any other "disability." The other side wants to recognize difference--special provisions should apply only to pregnant women. Lise Vogel examines the evolution of this debate on pregnant women in the workplace, looking at theoretical as well as practical implications.