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Description

In this book Christina Gringeri investigates the effects of homeworking on workers, mainly women, and their families and explores the role of the state in subsidizing the development of homeworking jobs that depend on gender as an organizing principle. She focuses on two Midwestern communities, Riverton, Wisconsin and Prairie Hills, Iowa, where more than 80 families have supplemented their incomes since 1986 as home-based contractors of small auto parts for The Middle Company, a Fortune 500 manufacturer and subcontractor of General Motors. Gringeri looks at rural development from the perspective of local and state officials as well as that of the workers. Through the use of extensive personal interviews, she shows how the advantage of homework for women being able to stay home with their families is outweighed by the disadvantages piecework pay far below minimum wage, long hours, unstable contracts, and lack of company benefits. Instead of providing the hoped-for financial panacea for rural families, Gringeri argues, industrial homework reinforces the unequal position of women as low-wage workers and holds families and communities below or near poverty level. Description Christina E. Gringeri is professor of social work at the University of Utah, where she has taught since 1990. She is the coeditor of Feminisms in Social Work Research: Promise and Possibilities for Justice-Based Knowledge. With a New Preface by the Author. This Kansas Open Books title is funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Humanities Open Book Program.

ISBN

978-0-7006-3095-0

Publication Date

11-9-1994

Publisher

University Press of Kansas

Format

viii, 200 pp.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1p2gjhr

Rights Statement

© 1994, 2021 by the University Press of Kansas. All rights reserved. The text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Public License.

Rights Status

Open Access

Getting By: Women Homeworkers and Rural Economic Development
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