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This edited volume uses a feminist approach to explore the economic
implications of the complex interrelationship between gender and
time use. Household composition, sexuality, migration patterns,
income levels, and race/ethnicity are all considered as important
factors that interact with gender and time use patterns. The book
is split in two sections: The macroeconomic portion explores
cutting edge issues such as time poverty and its relationship to
income poverty, and the macroeconomic effects of recession and
austerity; while the microeconomic section studies topics such as
differences by age, activity sequencing, and subjective well-being
of time spent. The chapters also examine a range of age groups,
from the labor of school-age children to elderly caregivers, and
analyze time use in Argentina, Australia, Canada, China, Finland,
India, Korea, South Africa, Tanzania, Turkey, and the United
States. Each chapter provides a substantial introduction to the
academic literature of its focus and is written to be revealing to
researchers and accessible to students and policymakers.
Professor Mommy is designed as a guide for women who want to
combine the life of the mind with the joys of motherhood. The book
provides practical suggestions from the authors' experiences
together with those of other women who have successfully combined
parenting with professorships. Professor Mommy addresses key
questions-when to have children and how many, what kinds of
academic institutions are the most family friendly, how to
negotiate around the myths that many people hold about academic
life, etc.-for women throughout all stages of their academic
careers, from graduate school through full professor. The authors
follow the demands of motherhood all the way from the infant stages
through the empty nest. At each stage, the authors offer invaluable
advice and tested strategies from women who have successfully
juggled the demands and rewards of an academic career and
motherhood. Written in clear, jargon-free prose, the book is
accessible to women in all disciplines, with concise chapters for
the time-constrained academic. The book's conversational tone is
supplemented with a review of the most current scholarship on
work/family balance and a survey of emerging family-friendly
practices at U.S. colleges and universities. Professor Mommy
asserts that the faculty mother has become and will remain a
permanent fixture on the landscape of the American academy.The
paperback edition features a new Preface that addresses the public
conversation about mothers and work raised in Sheryl Sandberg's
Lean In and Anne-Marie Slaughter's Why Women Still Can't Have it
All. The new Preface also answers frequently asked questions from
readers. The paperback edition features a new preface that brings
the book into conversation with Sheryl Sandberg's Lean In and
Anne-Marie Slaughter's "Why Women Still Can't Have It All," as well
as a new afterword providing specific suggestions for institutional
change.
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