Article

Leisure, gender and family: The influence of social policy

Details

Citation

Kay T (2000) Leisure, gender and family: The influence of social policy. Leisure Studies, 19 (4), pp. 247-265. https://doi.org/10.1080/02614360050118823

Abstract
A number of authors have recently called for reconsideration of the way in which gender and the family are investigated within leisure studies. This paper proposes that future analyses should include more explicit recognition of the ideological and practical influence of social policy on contemporary gender relations. The paper suggests that social policy has particular significance for debates within leisure studies, about the relationship between men and women's market and domestic labour, and their access to leisure. The paper investigates the influence of social policy on male and female adult life patterns through comparative analysis of social policy interventions and labour market outcomes in the economically advanced nations. It focusses on the policy stance in relation to paid work, especially maternal and paternal employment. It is shown that ‘family-related’ social policies universally support fathers' employment, but vary in the extent to which they encourage mothers' labour market activity. The implications of this for gender differentiation in leisure are explored through analysis of cross-national data for male and female sports participation in Europe. The analysis shows a strong correlation between gender discrimination in family-related social policy, and differentials in male-female sports participation rates. The paper next considers the implications of policy intervention for divergence within the female population. A detailed case study of the UK examines how family-related policy may differentially affect women in different socio-economic situations. The paper concludes that whether family-related policies encourage women to see themselves primarily as caregivers within the family unit, or as citizens with individualized rights, is likely to affect both their sense of entitlement to personal leisure and their ability to access it.

Journal
Leisure Studies: Volume 19, Issue 4

StatusPublished
FundersLoughborough University
Publication date01/01/2000
ISSN0261-4367

People (1)

People

Professor Tess Kay

Professor Tess Kay

Deputy Dean and Head of Sport, Sport