Series Title | European Urban and Regional Studies |
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Series Details | Vol.23, No.3, July 2016, p220-230 |
Publication Date | July 2016 |
ISSN | 0969-7764 |
Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
Abstract: In the political fluidity of our times, the dismal economic situation in Greece is perhaps extreme but indicative of a deepening crisis in Europe, which is expanding, both geographically and socially. Contrary to the dominant rhetoric, austerity measures and pacts imposed on Greece, Portugal, Spain – and later Cyprus – do not seem to provide effective remedies. On the contrary, they seem to plunge entire areas and groups of people into a vicious cycle of rising unemployment, shrinking incomes and deep impoverishment. In the context of this rhetoric, an almost exclusive emphasis on the macro-economic aspects of the crisis, seems to “expel” from public debate the fact that there are effects of austerity policies that are unevenly distributed, inscribed as they are on existing inequalities: inequalities among places, between women and men, locals and migrants, big and small employers, secure and precarious workers and, most importantly, intersections of these. This paper engages with some of the less debated aspects of the crisis in Athens, with a focus on the complex and usually invisible ways in which it impacts on women. he re-shaping of care, as well as practices of coping with/resisting the crisis.It draws upon research in a low-income neighbourhood of Athens and focuses on changes in women’s everyday lives, which have to do with job precarity and job loss, destruction of social services and t |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0969776414523802 |
Subject Categories | Employment and Social Affairs |
Countries / Regions | Greece |