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Work, Employment & Society
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Obscuring the costs of home care: restructuring at work

Jane Aronson

McMaster University, Canada, aronsonj{at}mcmaster.ca

Sheila M. Neysmith

University of Toronto, Canada, sheila.neysmith{at}utoronto.ca

This study of displaced home care workers reveals how managed competition serves to produce a flexible and atomized work force. Laid off when their nonprofit employer could not compete in the local home care market, workers blamed their employer and their union for their jeopardy. Obscured from local view was the role of government policy in offloading services to the market, benefiting privileged participants in the hospital, professional and market health care sectors. Workers’ indignation at their own and their elderly clients’ unfair treatment dissipated: they had to attend to the practical imperatives in their lives, and were unable to locate a target for their protest. Resolving to be flexible and self-sufficient in the future, they struggled to rework identities as committed carers. The study illuminates how particular organizational and political processes render services more meagre and labour more flexible, and suggests particular possibilities for both accommodating and disrupting those trends.

Key Words: home care policy • home care work • job insecurity • restructuring • work narratives

Work, Employment & Society, Vol. 20, No. 1, 27-45 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/0950017006061272


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