1st Edition

Good Enough Mothering? Feminist Perspectives on Lone Motherhood

Edited By Elizabeth Bortolaia Silva Copyright 1996
    252 Pages
    by Routledge

    252 Pages
    by Routledge

    Currently, lone mothers and their children make up almost 20 per cent of families with dependent children in the UK, a threefold increase since 1970. Yet, while they are often cited by politicians as both a symptom and cause of social breakdown, relatively little is known of the causes, consequences and conditions of lone motherhood in Britain and throughout Europe.
    Good Enough Mothering? provides accounts of historical patterns of mothering and ideologies of the family with cross-national comparisons of policies and experience of lone motherhood in developed and developing countries. Countries include: Britain, US, Norway, South Africa, Kenya, Thailand, India, Brazil and the Caribbean. This engaging edited collection will appeal to students of social policy, women's studies and social work.

    Introduction, Elizabeth Bortolaia Silva; Chapter 1 The Transformation of Mothering, Elizabeth Bortolaia Silva; Chapter 2 Deconstructing Motherhood, Carol Smart; Chapter 3 Mothering and Social Responsibilities in a Cross-Cultural Perspective, Henrietta L.Moore; Chapter 4 Diversity in Patterns of Parenting and Household Formation, Carolyn Baylies; Chapter 5 Mothers, Workers, Wives, Jane Millar; Chapter 6 Rational Economic Man or Lone Mothers in Context?, Rosalind Edwards, Simon Duncan; Chapter 7 ‘Parental Responsibility’: The Reassertion of Private Patriarchy?, Lorraine M.Fox Harding; Chapter 8 Social Anxieties about Lone Motherhood and Ideologies of the Family, Mary McIntosh; Chapter 9 Debates on Disruption, Louie Burghes; Chapter 10 Social Constructions of Lone Motherhood, Ann Phoenix; Chapter 11 Unpalatable Choices and Inadequate Families, Roseneil Sasha, Kirk Mann;

    Biography

    Elizabeth Bortolaia Silva is Research Fellow and runs the Gender Analysis and Policy Unit in the School of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Leeds.

    'This volume's contributors tackle questions important in both academic and political debates: can single mothers be good mothers? Why the increase in single motherhood across many countries? How does social policy affect single-mother families?' - Journal of Social Policy

    'Thoughtful, insightful and theoretically sophisticated perspectives on a subject which is often the target of blanket pathologising attack ... reader-friendly and engaging...accessibly written.' - Capital and Class

    'A sobering piece of political sociology that focuses on Britain but could productively be read by social analysts in every region of the world.' - Population and Development Review

    'A wide-ranging and stimulating discussion...well written and offers critical analyses of key issues including the Child Support Act, the outcomes of lone motherhood for children and the underclass debate.' - Health Visitor

    'Exemplifies the diversity of feminist thought around lone mothering.' - Feminism & Psychology