In authors or contributors

The Regulation of Paid Care Workers' Wages and Conditions in the Non-Profit Sector: A Toronto Case Study

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
The Regulation of Paid Care Workers' Wages and Conditions in the Non-Profit Sector: A Toronto Case Study
Abstract
The paper explores the distinctive regulatory space in which care workers' wages and conditions are determined. It draws on a case study of the non-profit sector of Toronto illustrated by the experience of four social services agencies located there. In doing so it examines the intersection between industrial regulation and practice, and other regulatory constraints or mechanisms identified by Lessig (1988). In community services these mechanisms include funding models, the gendered social norms that presume and underpin the valuation of paid care work and the organization of care work in diverse care settings. It is the mix of these regulatory forces and the specific contexts within which they interact that effect particular wage and non-wage outcomes for care work.
Publication
Relations Industrielles
Volume
65
Issue
3
Pages
380-399
Date
Summer 2010
Language
English
ISSN
0034379X
Short Title
The Regulation of Paid Care Workers' Wages and Conditions in the Non-Profit Sector
Accessed
3/25/15, 3:02 PM
Library Catalog
ProQuest
Rights
Copyright Universite Laval - Departement des Relations Industrielles Summer 2010
Citation
Charlesworth, S. (2010). The Regulation of Paid Care Workers’ Wages and Conditions in the Non-Profit Sector: A Toronto Case Study. Relations Industrielles, 65(3), 380–399. http://www.erudit.org/revue/ri/2010/v65/n3/index.html