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A Gendered Theory of Employment, Unemployment, and Sickness

Christina Beatty, Steve Fothergill, Donald Houston, Ryan Powell and Paul Sissons
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Donald Houston: Geography, School of Social and Environmental Sciences, Dundee University, Perth Road, Dundee DD1 4HN, Scotland
Ryan Powell: Centre for Regional Economic and Social Research, Sheffield Hallam University, City Campus, Howard Street, Sheffield S1 1WB, England
Paul Sissons: Institute for Employment Studies, Mantell Building, University of Sussex, Brighton BN1 9RF, England

Environment and Planning C, 2009, vol. 27, issue 6, 958-974

Abstract: The high level of receipt of disability benefits in the UK was until the 1990s a problem predominantly affecting men. However, the number of women claiming—1.1 million—is now on a similar scale. The decline of heavy industry produced large numbers of men with ill health and limited alternative employment prospects who claimed disability benefits. However, this explanation is problematic for women, who have seen an expansion in employment. We set out a framework that reconciles the central importance of the level of labour demand in explaining worklessness with the paradoxical simultaneous rise of women's employment and receipt of disability benefits. Women claiming disability benefits are overwhelmingly located alongside male claimants in areas where heavy industry has declined, pointing towards linkages between the ‘male’ and ‘female’ sides of the labour market. Additionally, there may be raised knowledge and local acceptance of disability benefits in these locations.

Date: 2009
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