Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-fbnjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T06:08:57.814Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Division of Labour in Early Child Care—Mothers and Others*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2009

Abstract

This paper is concerned with the work of child care and with the division of work between mothers and others. Drawing on research data, it explores the idea that this work takes place in a domain located between the public and the private. The perspectives of mothers and health visitors on child care and health care are considered, with particular reference to their perspectives on their own and others' knowledge and responsibility.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1990

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Armstrong, D. (1983), The Political Anatomy of the Body, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Black, N. et al. (1984), Health and Disease: A Reader, Open University Press, Milton Keynes.Google Scholar
Brannen, J. and Moss, P. (1988), New Mothers at Work: Employment and Childcare, Unwin Paperbacks, London.Google Scholar
Buswell, C. (1983), ‘Social acceptability—how mothers perceive normal growth and development in their first child’, Paper given at Medical Sociology Conference, York, September.Google Scholar
Cohen, B. (1988), Caring for Children: Services and Policies for Childcare and Equal Opportunities in the United Kingdom. Report for the European Commission's Childcare Network, Commission of the European Communities, 8 Storey's Gate, London SW1 3AT.Google Scholar
David, M.E. (1985), ‘Motherhood and social policy—a matter of education’, Critical Social Policy, 12, Spring, 2843.Google Scholar
Davies, C. (1988), ‘The health visitor as mother's friend: a woman's place in public health, 1900–14’, Social History of Medicine, 1:1, 04.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Department of Education and Science (1986), Health Education from 5 to 16, HMSO, London.Google Scholar
Department of Health and Social Security and Department of Education and Science (1978) Local Authority Social Services Letter, LASSL (78)1, DHSS/DES.Google Scholar
Dingwall, R. (1977), The Social Organisation of Health Visitor Training, Croom Helm, London.Google Scholar
Donzelot, J. (1980), The Policing of Families: Welfare Versus the State, Hutchinson, London.Google Scholar
Douglas, J.W.B. (1964), The Home and the School: a Study of Ability and Attainment in the Primary School, MacGibbon and Kee, London.Google Scholar
Ennew, J. (1989), ‘Desire and the anecdote: the ethnographic present of research on children and childhood’, Paper for ASA Conference. University of York 3–6 04 1989.Google Scholar
Finch, J. and Groves, D. (eds.) (1983), A Labour of Love: Women, Work and Caring, Routledge and Kegan Paul, London.Google Scholar
Foster, M-C. (1988), ‘The French puéricultrice’, Children and Society, 2:4, 319–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foster, M-C. and Mayall, B. (1990), ‘The health visitor as educator’, Journal of Advanced Nursing, 15:3, 286–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freire, P. (1972), Pedagogy of the Oppressed, Penguin, Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
Gipps, C. (1982), ‘Nursery nurses and nursery teachers II: their attitudes towards pre-school children and their parents’, Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 23, 3, 255–67.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Graham, H. (1979), ‘Prevention and health: every mother's business. A comment on child health policies in the 1970s’, in Harris, C. (ed.). The Sociology of the Family, Sociological Monograph No. 28, University of Keele, Keele.Google Scholar
Graham, H. (1984), Women, Health and the Family, Wheatsheaf Books, Brighton.Google Scholar
Hall, D.M.B. (1989), Health for All Children: A Programme for Child Health Surveillance, Oxford Medical Publications, Oxford.Google Scholar
Health Visitors' Association (1980), Health Visiting in the 80s, Health Visitors' Association, 50 Southwark Street, London SE1 1UN.Google Scholar
Hearn, J. (1988), ‘Child abuse: violence and sexualities towards young people’, Sociology, 22:4, 531–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hearn, J. (1989), ‘The need to study men and masculinity’, Social Science Teacher, 18:1, 79.Google Scholar
Jackson, B. and Jackson, S. (1979), Childminder, Routledge and Kegan Paul, London.Google Scholar
Lewis, J. (1980), The Politics of Motherhood, Croom Helm, London.Google Scholar
Lewis, J. (ed.) (1986a), Labour and Love: Women's Experience of Home and Family 1850–1940, Basil Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Lewis, J. (1986b), ‘The working class wife and mother and state intervention 1870–1918’, in Lewis, J. (ed.). Labour and Love: Women's Experience of Home and Family 1850–1940, Basil Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Lewis, C. and O'Brien, M. (1987), Reassessing Fatherhood, Sage, London.Google Scholar
Macmillan, M. (1930), The Nursery School, Sage, London.Google Scholar
Marsh, P. (1987), ‘Social work and fathers—an exclusive practice’ in Lewis, C. and O'Brien, M. (1987), Reassessing Fatherhood, Dent, London.Google Scholar
Mayall, B. and Petrie, P. (1983), Childminding and Day Nurseries: What Kind of Care, Heinemann Educational Books, London.Google Scholar
Mayall, B. (1986), Keeping Children Healthy, Allen and Unwin, London.Google Scholar
Mayall, B. and Foster, M-C. (1989), Child Health Care: Living with Children, Working for Children, Heinemann Professional Books, Oxford.Google Scholar
McIntosh, J. (1987), A Consumer Perspective on the Health Visiting Service, Department of Child Health and Obstetrics, University of Glasgow, Glasgow.Google Scholar
Ministry of Health (1956), An Enquiry into Health Visiting in the Field of Work, Training and Recruitment of Health Visitors (The Jameson Report), HMSO, London.Google Scholar
Moss, P. (1988), Child Care and Equality of Opportunity: A Consolidated Report of the Child Care Network to the European Commission, 04 1988.Google Scholar
Nicoll, A. (1983), ‘Community child health services—for better or worse’, Health Visitor, 56:7, 241–43.Google ScholarPubMed
Oakley, A. (1981), Subject Women, Fontana Press, London.Google Scholar
Oakley, A. (1987), ‘On the importance of being a nurse’, in Oakley, A. (ed.), Telling the Truth about Jerusalem, Basil Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Owen, G. (ed.) (1983), Health Visiting, 2nd edition, Ballière Tindall, London.Google Scholar
Parton, C. and Parton, N. (1988), ‘Women, the family and child protection’, Critical Social Policy, 24, Winter, 3849.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pinchbeck, I. and Hewitt, M. (1973), Children in English Society, Vol. II, Routledge and Kegan Paul, London.Google Scholar
Pre-School Playgroups Association (1981), Parents and Playgroups, Allen and Unwin, London.Google Scholar
Pre-School Playgroups Association (1989), ‘Getting the message to parents’, Contact, 04, 1720.Google Scholar
Pugh, G., Aplin, G., De'ath, E., Moxon, M. (1987), Partnership in Action Vols. I and II, National Children's Bureau, London.Google Scholar
Quortrup, J. (1985), ‘Placing children in the division of labour’, in Close, P. and Collins, R. (eds.), Family and Economy in Modern Society, Macmillan, London.Google Scholar
Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) (1981), Health and Prevention in Primary Care. Report from General Practice, 18, Royal College of General Practitioners, London.Google Scholar
Royal College of General Practitioners (1982), Healthier Children—Thinking Prevention. Report from General Practice, 22, Royal College of General Practitioners, London.Google Scholar
Russell, G. (1983), The Changing Role of Fathers, Open University Press, Milton Keynes.Google Scholar
Rutter, M. and Madge, N. (1976), Cycles of Deprivation, Heinemann, London.Google Scholar
Sefi, S. (1988), ‘Health visitors talking to mothers’, Health Visitor Journal, 61, 710.Google ScholarPubMed
Stacey, M. (1981), ‘The Division of Labour Revisited or overcoming the two Adams’, in Abrams, P. et al. (eds.), Practice and Progress: British Sociology 1950–1980, George Allen and Unwin, London.Google Scholar
Stacey, M. and Davies, C. (1983), Division of Labour in Child Health Care: Final Report to SSRC Department of Sociology, University of Warwick.Google Scholar
Steedman, C. (1982), The Quiet House, Virago, London.Google Scholar
Tizard, B. and Hughes, M. (1984), Young Children Learning, Fontana, London.Google Scholar
Tones, K. (1984), ‘Epilogue’ in Campbell, G. (ed.), Health Education and Youth: A Review of Research and Development, The Falmer Press, London.Google Scholar
Ungerson, C. (1984), ‘Gender divisions and community care’, Paper given at Resources Within Households Study Group, Institute of Education, London.Google Scholar
Van Daalen, R. (1986), ‘Medicalisation of the care of infants, using the Netherlands as an example’, Background paper No. 3, Inter-regional conference on appropriate technology following birth, 7–11 10 1986, Trieste, Italy.Google Scholar
Van der Eyken, W. (1987), DHSS Under-Fives Initiative: a National Monitoring Survey of a £7m Pre-School Provision Programme funded within England by central government through the voluntary sector, Report to DHSS, Institute of Child Health, University of Bristol.Google Scholar
Walker, A. and Walker, C. (eds.) (1987), The Growing Divide: A Social Audit 1979–1987. CPAG, London.Google Scholar
Wilkin, D. (1979), Caring for the Mentally Handicapped Child, Croom Helm, London.Google Scholar