Author: Yavorsky, Jill E.; Qian, Yue; Sargent, Amanda C.
Title: The gendered pandemic: The implications of COVIDâ€19 for work and family Cord-id: yajd6z6o Document date: 2021_4_9
ID: yajd6z6o
Snippet: The COVIDâ€19 pandemic has affected nearly all the aspects of society since it's onset in early 2020. In addition to infecting and taking the lives of millions of global citizens, the pandemic has fundamentally changed family and work patterns. The pandemic and associated mitigation measures have increased the unemployment rates, amplified health risks for essential workers required to work onâ€site, and led to unprecedented rates of telecommuting. Additionally, due to school/daycare closures
Document: The COVIDâ€19 pandemic has affected nearly all the aspects of society since it's onset in early 2020. In addition to infecting and taking the lives of millions of global citizens, the pandemic has fundamentally changed family and work patterns. The pandemic and associated mitigation measures have increased the unemployment rates, amplified health risks for essential workers required to work onâ€site, and led to unprecedented rates of telecommuting. Additionally, due to school/daycare closures and social distancing, many parents have lost access to institutional and informal childcare support during the COVIDâ€19 crisis. Such losses in childcare support have significantly impacted the paid and unpaid labor of parents, particularly of mothers. In this article, we synthesize recent research on pandemicâ€related changes to work and family in the United States. Applying an intersectionality lens, we discuss the gendered implications of these changes. Because gender inequality in family and work are connected, COVIDâ€19 has, in many cases, deepened the preâ€existing gender inequalities in both realms.
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