articleJournal of European Social PolicyJul 25, 2006Closed access

Change in care regimes and female migration: the ‘care drain’ in the Mediterranean

University of Siena · Sapienza University of Rome · +1 more institution

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Abstract

Concern over the need to provide long-term care for an ageing population has stimulated a search for new solutions able to ensure financial viability and a better balance between demand and supply of care. There is at present a great variety of care regimes across industrial countries, with Mediterranean countries forming a distinctive cluster where management of care is overwhelmingly entrusted to the family. In some of these countries elderly care has recently attracted large flows of care migrants, ushering in a new division of labour among family carers (mainly women), female immigrants, and skilled native workers. The article explores the interconnections between the feminization of migration, on the one…

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635
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35.58
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100%
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Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Population ageing
  • Immigration
  • Health care
  • Equity (law)
  • Business
  • Long-term care
  • Sustainability
  • Population
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