State and Metropolitan Area Data Book

State and Metropolitan Area Data Book
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 444
Release: 1991
Genre: Metropolitan areas
ISBN:

1979-2010: Contains data similar to that found in the County and City Databook, but on the state and MSA (Metropolitan Statistical Areas) levels.

Debate Over Child Care, 1969-1990

Debate Over Child Care, 1969-1990
Author: Abbie Gordon Klein
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 466
Release: 1992-07-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1438409249

The Debate Over Child Care: 1969-1990 offers a new perspective on the pervading problem of providing child care services in the United States. The author traces the contemporary debate over the sponsorship of child care services and compares this to the past debate over the sponsorship of kindergartens during the Progressive Era. Klein compares the function of child care across societal sectors, and points out that turf fighting and imbedded ideological differences have prohibited the development of a proactive social policy for providing needed child care services. She analyzes the advantages and disadvantages of five different sponsors: the public schools, the church, private enterprise, non-profit organizations, and corporations. Past and present federal legislation is discussed in relation to the divisive issue of sponsorship.

Negotiated Care

Negotiated Care
Author: Margaret Nelson
Publisher: Temple University Press
Total Pages: 318
Release: 2010-03-29
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 1439904065

Weaving together numerous richly detailed interviews and surveys with recent feminist literature on the role of caregiving in women’s lives and investigations of women’s involvement in home-based work, this book explores the daily lives of family day care providers. Margaret K. Nelson uncovers the dilemmas providers face in their relationships with parents who bring children to them, with the children themselves, with the providers’ family members, and with representatives of the state’s regulatory system. She links these dilemmas to the contradiction between an increasing demand for personalized, cheap, informal child care services and a public policy that subjects child care providers to public scrutiny while giving them limited material and ideological support. Nelson’s discussions with day care providers reveal considerable tensions that emerge over issues of control and intimacy. The dual motivation of business and family gives rise to problems, such as how to maintain enough distance from the parents to set limits on hours while providing personal service in a family setting. Family day care providers often enter this occupation as a way to engage in paid work and meet their own child care responsibilities. This book looks at how they manage to negotiate a setting that simultaneously involves money, trust, and caring. Family day care represents one of the most prevalent sources of child care for working parents. It is an especially common form of care for very young children, yet it remains little studied. In the popular press, stereotypes—many of them negative—prevail. This book substitutes a thorough, detailed examination of this child care setting from a perspective that has generally been ignored-that of the caregiver. While providing useful insights into the role of caregiving in women’s lives and the phenomenon of home-based work, it contributes to the ongoing policy debates about child care. In the series Women in the Political Economy, edited by Ronnie J. Steinberg.

Child Care

Child Care
Author: United States. General Accounting Office
Publisher:
Total Pages: 160
Release: 1989
Genre: Child care
ISBN:

A selected bibliography on child care consisting of 386 items, mostly annotated, taken from business, educational, sociological, and legal databases, and published between 1978 and 1988.