Sardadvar, Karin. 2022. Ambivalent (In)Visibility: Commercial Cleaning Work during the Covid-19 Crisis in Austria. In: Covid, Crisis, Care, and Change? International Gender Perspectives on Re/Production, State and Feminist Transitions, Hrsg. Antonia Kupfer, Constanze Stutz, 31-44. Leverkusen Opladen: Barbara Budrich.
BibTeX
Abstract
In light of the Covid-19 pandemic, some jobs became publicly highlighted as ‘essential’ or ‘key’ work. In German-speaking countries, this discourse focuses on the so-called ‘system-relevant’ work (see also Grenz/Günster and Dudley in this volume). Even if the terms differ, they basically refer to jobs that are indispensable for basic human needs and the functioning of society. Among them are jobs in care and medicine, schools and teaching, and critical infrastructure such as public transport and waste disposal. Cleaning is another of these system-relevant professions. Cleaning work is necessary for the functioning of a society and its economy. What, then, does the new attention to key work in the context of the pandemic mean for cleaning work? What does it imply for the working conditions of cleaners during the pandemic and in the future? How is the cleaning sector faring in the crisis? In this paper, I will take a closer look at these questions. The objective is to shed light on work in a sector that often remains invisible (Sardadvar 2019) and has particularly bad employment conditions (see section 2 in this paper), and to see how the pandemic has affected it.
Tags
Press 'enter' for creating the tagPublication's profile
Status of publication | Published |
---|---|
Affiliation | WU |
Type of publication | Chapter in edited volume |
Language | English |
Title | Ambivalent (In)Visibility: Commercial Cleaning Work during the Covid-19 Crisis in Austria |
Title of whole publication | Covid, Crisis, Care, and Change? International Gender Perspectives on Re/Production, State and Feminist Transitions |
Editor | Antonia Kupfer, Constanze Stutz |
Page from | 31 |
Page to | 44 |
Location | Leverkusen Opladen |
Publisher | Barbara Budrich |
Year | 2022 |
Reviewed? | Y |
URL | https://shop.budrich.de/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/9783847416777.pdf |
ISBN | 978-3-8474-2541-0 |
Open Access | Y |
Open Access Link | https://shop.budrich.de/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/9783847416777.pdf |
Associations
- Projects
- Split shifts and the fragmentation of working lives
- People
- Sardadvar, Karin (Details)
- Organization
- Institute for Sociology and Social Research IN (Details)
- Research areas (ÖSTAT Classification 'Statistik Austria')
- 5400 Sociology (Details)
- 5402 General sociology (Details)
- 5429 Genealogy (Details)
- 5433 Gender studies (Details)
- 5904 Ergonomics (Details)