Gender-Based Typologies Alternative Typologies n Jane Lewis n Diane Sainsbury n Sairoff n Me! n Walter Korpi n Defamilialization Lewis: Male Breadwinner Model n Strong, modified and weak Male Breadwinner Model n Male Breadwinner means that the state expects the man to bring home the money, while the woman is expected to stay at home n Problem: if the country does not have a strong male bread winner model, then the model only explains what it is not, rather than what it is n It does not have an “ought,” we only know what is bad, not what ought to be Sainsbury n Again a 3-group model n Male breadwinner n Separate gender roles n Individual earner-carer Sainsbury’s Male Breadwinner a) unpaid caring work b) mostly private care c) priority to men and gendered division of labor d) entitlement based on maintanence e) approximates the liberal model (in my opinion) Separate Gender Roles a) strict division of labor b) joint taxation c) women have primarily family responsibility d) paid component to caregivers at home (i.e. maternity leaves, leaves to take care of sick parents, etc.) e) in my opinion approximates the conservative model (but doesn’t this model support the idea of a male-breadwinner?) Individual Earner-Carer a) both father and mother as earners and carers b) entitlement on citizenship or residence c) individual benefits d) separate taxation e) employment aimed at both sexes f) strong state involvement in care g) paid components in and outside the home h) approximates the social-democratic model Summary on Sainsbury n The individual-carer model is an important contribution to understanding the dynamics of Swedish welfare policy n She shows important differences among Scandinavian welfare regimes n But the Scandinavian countries are still closer to each other than to other countries n Her first two categories are confusing n Still rather similar to EA’s typology, but uses different criteria Sairoff 3 dimensions: i) family welfare orientation ii) female work desirability iii) who receives benefits 4 Types of Regimes 1) Protestant Social Democratic Welfare States 2) Protestant Liberal Welfare States 3) Advanced Christian Democratic Welfare States 4) Late Female Mobilization Welfare States Problems n Does not look at things like father leaves n The causal explanation is part of his definition n Still resembles Esping-Andersen Saxonberg (old) n It is better to keep the EA typology as much as possible, because easier to understand n So I keep the terms “liberal” and “conservative” n I add “gender equality” because social democratic policy has changed radically in the last two decades n I add “state socialist” to define the communist regimes Conservative Policy Defined n Traditional values n Encourages women to stay at home n Maternity leaves n Lump sum parental leaves n Lack of access to child care Liberalism Defined n Minimum state intervention, you can do what you want n Little or no maternity leaves n Private childcare n Emphasis on anti-discrimination laws n Tax cuts, means-testing Gender Equality Defined n Against traditional gender roles n Generous father and parental leaves n Encourages fathers to stay at home n Freedom of living arrangements n Easy access to daycare State Socialist Model n Women forced to work n But maintain full responsibility for the household n Women work, men have careers n Relatively high access to daycare n Maternity leaves and additional maternity leaves Saxonberg’s Typology Defamilialization n Alternative to decommodification n If defamialized, then the state takes over family tasks and the mother has less responsibility for the household (also because the father does more?) n If familialized, then the family (i.e. the mother) is responsible for all household tasks. Saxonberg’s New Typology Korpi n general family support (= conservative) n market-oriented (= liberal) n dual-earner (= social democratic, but carer?) What Now??? n Many typologies exist n They are similar in what they want to accomplish n They are rather similar to EA in that many usually find 3 groups n But they use different criteria than EA n Defamilialization is becoming popular n But this dual model misses important differences between liberal and conservative family policies