绘制育儿社区:种族、阶级、性别和空间相交的地方

IF 2.3 Q1 SOCIAL WORK
Cynthia Edmonds-Cady
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:本文探讨了年轻、低收入女性在作为单身母亲所占据的内部和外部空间的基础上创造的独特的社区建设。研究了在这些社会构建的社区中,与不同妇女的代表性、发言权和权力有关的问题。人们关注年轻的低收入母亲如何在地理和社会边界内体验并积极创建自己的支持性社区,积极抵制占主导地位和压迫性的假设。为了深入探讨这些概念,我们介绍了一项人种学研究的结果,该研究调查了居住在美国中西部一个小城市的11位年轻、低收入、种族多样的单身母亲的社区参与情况。研究结果集中在女性生活通过母亲、种族、阶级和地理/物理空间的棱镜体现社区理念的多种方式上。还强调使用定性的参与性绘图技术来检查这些物理和社会构建的边界。讨论了社会工作者如何通过使用交叉视角来定位这些妇女创建的有机母亲社区并与之合作,从而最好地倡导社会正义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mapping Communities of Mothering: Where Race, Class, Gender, and Space Intersect
ABSTRACT This manuscript explores the unique construction of community that young, low-income, women create, based on the embodied internal and external spaces they occupy as lone mothers. Issues related to diverse women’s representation, voice, and power, within these socially constructed communities are examined. Attention is paid to how young low-income mothers experience and actively create their own supportive community within both geographic and social boundaries, in active resistance to dominant and oppressive assumptions. To explore these concepts in-depth, results are presented from an ethnographic study that examined the community participation of eleven young, low-income, racially diverse single mothers living in a small U.S. Midwestern city. Findings focus on the multiple ways that women’s lives embodied the idea of community through the prism of motherhood, race, class, and geographic/physical space. The use of qualitative participatory mapping techniques is also emphasized to examine these physically and socially constructed boundaries. Implications are discussed for ways that social workers can best advocate for social justice by using an intersectional lens to locate and partner with the organic communities of mothering that these women created.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
8.30%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: The only journal of its kind in the United States, the Journal of Progressive Human Services covers political, social, personal, and professional problems in human services from a progressive perspective. The journal stimulates debate about major social issues and contributes to the development of the analytical tools needed for building a caring society based on equality and justice. The journal"s contributors examine oppressed and vulnerable groups, struggles by workers and clients on the job and in the community, dilemmas of practice in conservative contexts, and strategies for ending racism, sexism, ageism, heterosexism, and discrimination of persons who are disabled and psychologically distressed.
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