capítulo de libro
Beyond states and markets: Families and family regimes in Latin America
Fecha
2021Registro en:
978-3-030-61269-6
978-3-030-61270-2
10.1007/978-3-030-61270-2
Autor
Blofield, Merike
Filgueira, Fernando
Giambruno, Cecilia
Martínez Franzoni, Juliana
Institución
Resumen
Much of the literature on social policies and social development in
Latin America recognizes the notion of welfare regimes as critical to
our understanding of the social protection and well-being of individuals,
granting thus a relevant role to markets, states, families and
their interactions (Filgueira 2007; Martínez Franzoni 2007). Yet while
states—through social, labor and regulatory policies, and their impact
on employment, wages and access to goods and services—have received
broad and in-depth scrutiny, families have been rather neglected. This
chapter seeks to contribute to correct this blind-spot by looking at the
structural trends regarding family change and at how they are fueled by—
and interact with—markets and state transformations. Such trends and
dynamics radically alter the capacity and role of families as units of social
protection and of resource enclosure and distribution. Gender, age and
family arrangements are transformed and create different family regimes
with relevant implications regarding the capacity and type of protection
families provide to their different members.