• Deutsch
    • English
  • Login
|
  • xmlui.dri2xhtml.structural.header.language

    Deutsch
  • Home
  • About
    • About GenderOpen
    • Policy
    • FAQ
  • Browse
    • Ressource Type
    • Year of publication
    • Author
    • Subject
    • This Collection
    • Year of publication
    • Author
    • Subject
  • Search
  • Submit
  • Cooperations
View Item 
  •   GenderOpen Home
  • Publikationstypen
  • Aufsatz in Sammelband
  • View Item
  •   GenderOpen Home
  • Publikationstypen
  • Aufsatz in Sammelband
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dx.doi.org/10.25595/2542
Title
Active Citizenship, Globalized Gender Relations and Human Rights
Author(s)
Ernst, Waltraud
Book Title
Human Rights. Feminist and Gender-Philosophical Perspectives
Editor(s)
Buchhammer, Brigitte
Kallhoff, Angela
Place of publication
Wien
Publisher
LIT Verlag
Year of publication
2021
Volume
5
ISBN
978-3-643-91213-8
Page reference
79-96
Language
englisch
Abstract
This paper discusses globalized gender relations and the meaning of citizenship and human rights in Europe. Under the promise of efficiency, a restructuring of European welfare states has taken place which concerns many aspects of life and has strong effects on social rights, especially concerning the cutting back of public care services. At the same time, gender relations have changed in the sense that women, traditionally the main care providers for their relatives, increasingly take part in the labor market. In this context, the question about who will care for children and the elderly becomes all the more important. To look at migration in this context is interesting because it is mostly female migrants as care providers, in precarious working conditions from all over the world, who fill the gap. These migrants seem to embody globalized gender relations, this is my thesis. Similar to care providers in earlier times, they are barely mentioned, rarely have access to social benefits and are seldom granted rights as full citizens. These "cosmobile" care providers challenge traditional concepts of citizenship, this is my second thesis, on an epistemic, normative, and empirical level in far-reaching ways.
Subject
Migration
Menschenrechte
Citizenship
globalized gender relations
migrants
human rights
Europe
welfare states
License
Creative Commons - Namensnennung 4.0
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.25595/2542
Publication type
Sammelbandbeitrag
Details
Files in this item
File
Description
Size
Format
Ernst_Active_Citizenship_Globalized_Gender_Relations_Human_Rights_2021.pdf
Download File
1.092 Mb
Adobe PDF
Export
BibTexEndnoteRIS
  • Data privacy
  • |
  • Imprint
  • |
  • Contact