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Care task division in familialistic care regimes : a comparative analysis of gender and socio-economic inequalities in Austria and Slovenia
ID Rodrigues, Ricardo (Avtor), ID Ilinca, Stefania (Avtor), ID Filipovič Hrast, Maša (Avtor), ID Srakar, Andrej (Avtor), ID Hlebec, Valentina (Avtor)

URLURL - Izvorni URL, za dostop obiščite https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/14/15/9423 Povezava se odpre v novem oknu
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Izvleček
Demographic aging has led to an increase in the number of people with multiple needs requiring different types of care delivered by formal and informal carers. The distribution of care tasks between formal and informal carers has a significant impact on the well-being of carers and on how efficiently care is delivered to users. The study has two aims. The first is to explore how task division in care for older people differs between two neighboring countries with different forms of familialism: Slovenia (prescribed familialism) and Austria (supported familialism). The second is to explore how income and gender are associated with task division across these forms of familialism. Multinomial logistic regression is applied to SHARE data (wave 6, 2015) to estimate five different models of task division, based on how personal care and household help are distributed between formal and informal carers. The findings show that the task division is markedly different between Slovenia and Austria, with complementation and supplementation models more frequent in Austria. Despite generous cash benefits and higher service availability in Austria, pro-rich inequalities in the use of formal care only are pervasive here, unlike in Slovenia. Both countries show evidence of pro-poor inequalities in the use of informal care only, while these inequalities are mostly absent from mixed models of task division. Generous cash transfers do not appear to reduce gender inequalities in supported familialism. Supported familialism may not fundamentally improve inequalities when compared with less generous forms of familialism.

Jezik:Angleški jezik
Ključne besede:social policy, elderly care, home care, informal care, inequalities, Austria, Slovenia
Vrsta gradiva:Članek v reviji
Tipologija:1.01 - Izvirni znanstveni članek
Organizacija:FDV - Fakulteta za družbene vede
Status publikacije:Objavljeno
Različica publikacije:Objavljena publikacija
Datum objave:01.08.2022
Leto izida:2022
Št. strani:Str. 1-18
Številčenje:Vol. 14, no. 15
PID:20.500.12556/RUL-138616 Povezava se odpre v novem oknu
UDK:364
ISSN pri članku:2071-1050
DOI:10.3390/su14159423 Povezava se odpre v novem oknu
COBISS.SI-ID:117139459 Povezava se odpre v novem oknu
Datum objave v RUL:03.08.2022
Število ogledov:659
Število prenosov:85
Metapodatki:XML DC-XML DC-RDF
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Gradivo je del revije

Naslov:Sustainability
Skrajšan naslov:Sustainability
Založnik:MDPI
ISSN:2071-1050
COBISS.SI-ID:5324897 Povezava se odpre v novem oknu

Licence

Licenca:CC BY 4.0, Creative Commons Priznanje avtorstva 4.0 Mednarodna
Povezava:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.sl
Opis:To je standardna licenca Creative Commons, ki daje uporabnikom največ možnosti za nadaljnjo uporabo dela, pri čemer morajo navesti avtorja.
Začetek licenciranja:03.08.2022

Sekundarni jezik

Jezik:Slovenski jezik
Ključne besede:socialna politika, oskrba starejših, nega na domu, neformalna oskrba, neenakosti, Avstrija, Slovenija

Projekti

Financer:ARRS - Agencija za raziskovalno dejavnost Republike Slovenije
Številka projekta:J5-8235-2017
Naslov:Exploring and understanding welfare state determinants of care provision for older people in the community in Slovenia and Austria

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