Between patriarchal constraints and neoliberal values: Dimensions of job quality for intimate partner violence survivors

Karni Krigel, Orly Benjamin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Scholars have established the difficulties inherent in proposals that employment may serve as a rescue route for survivors of intimate partner violence (IPV). However, they have paid little attention to the possibility that those who do strive for employment experience a clash between the prevailing neoliberal policy and the patriarchal culture dominant in their relationship with their violent partners. Based on 33 in-depth interviews with IPV survivors, this study used a grounded theory approach to follow women’s experiences in the personal and employment life domain. The authors propose that in order to understand employment in the field of IPV survivors, it is necessary to deploy a job quality perspective. Further, they found that a gendered conceptualization of job quality is required, one that is evaluated by three relational dimensions: employment spaces blocking IPV penetration, control over one’s own income and a sense of skill recognition. These relational dimensions show that in participants’ work lives, neoliberalism and patriarchy conflict with one another. Accordingly, the contradiction between these value systems must be taken into account in conceptualizations of their mutual reinforcement. The authors propose reconciling them by focusing on the challenging experience of women’s employment, from which the innovative meaning of job quality arises.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)932-949
Number of pages18
JournalCurrent Sociology
Volume68
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2020

Keywords

  • IPV
  • job quality
  • neoliberal policy
  • patriarchal culture

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Sociology and Political Science

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