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Exploring Activism among Swedish Nurses and Midwives: Patriarchy, Proletarization and Professionalization

Abstract
This paper deals with two protests initiated by care workers in Sweden. The first protest, which began in 2011, is carried out by nursing graduates and its main objective is to raise entry wages in the nursing profession. The second protest, initiated by midwives in 2012, is directed against the current deficiencies in Swedish maternity care. The overarching aim of this paper is to explore the implications of nursing/midwifery as gendered professions in relation to these protests. More specifically, I focus on the possible manifestation of gender stereotyping in the content of protest and in the public debate. In line with these objectives, a qualitative approach is adopted. The theoretical dimensions of patriarchy, proletarization and professionalization are used to analyze framing processes among the protesters themselves as well as in the media debate. The intersecting practices of these dimensions are highlighted, which points to the importance of studying the contemporary struggles for professional recognition in nursing/midwifery in relation to the gendered “nature” of care work and the neoliberal restructuring of healthcare. The results of this study imply that these overlapping dimensions create difficulties in which certain overarching structures, such as the feminization of care work, remain largely obscure.
Degree
Student essay
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/36268
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  • Masteruppsatser (Department of Sociology and Work Science / Institutionen för sociologi och arbetsvetenskap)
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gupea_2077_36268_1.pdf (465.6Kb)
Date
2014-06-27
Author
Hasselgren, Caroline
Keywords
nursing
midwifery
gendered professions
activism
patriarchy
proletarization
professionalization
feminism
neoliberalism
healthcare restructuring
new public management
collective action frames
framing
Language
swe
Metadata
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