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Caring Labour and Domestic Violence Shelter Work in the COVID-19 Pandemic
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Quinlan, Andrea (Author)
- Singh, Rashmee (Author)
- Olenewa, Jenniffer (Author)
Title
Caring Labour and Domestic Violence Shelter Work in the COVID-19 Pandemic
Abstract
Caring labour has long been a key part of the labour required of domestic violence shelter workers. Under the weight of public health directives during the COVID-19 pandemic, the nature and consequences of this caring labour changed. This paper examines these shifts within the broader context of the enduring invisibility of caring labour and the depoliticization of anti-violence work, both of which began long before the COVID-19 pandemic and has endured after. Drawing on 38 semi-structured interviews with shelter staff and residents working and living in domestic violence shelters in Ontario, Canada in 2022, we examine the pandemic-related shifts in shelter work and their wide-reaching consequences for workers, survivors, and anti-violence work.
Publication
Social Problems
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Place
Oxford
Date
2026
Pages
15 pages
Accessed
1/26/26, 7:01 PM
Language
English
Citation
Quinlan, A., Singh, R., & Olenewa, J. (2026). Caring Labour and Domestic Violence Shelter Work in the COVID-19 Pandemic. Social Problems, 15 pages. https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/socpro/spag001
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