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      Staff shortages in Swedish elderly care – reflections on gender and diversity politics

      e-viewpoint
      Linda Lill
      International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care
      Emerald Publishing
      Migrants, Elderly care, Social politics, Social risks, Staff shortage

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          The purpose of this paper is to discuss how the labor shortage is described at the national level and how these problematizations correlate to gender and diversity politics. The paper is overview of the governance of staff shortages in elderly care, how it is articulated and how the governmental scenario of solutions, which includes the channeling of unemployed migrants into elderly care. Politicians and public media describe the situation as desperate and the issue of the staff shortages in elderly care is described as a state of crisis. A highly profiled solution is to open up elderly care for unemployed migrants.

          Design/methodology/approach

          By analyzing specific management strategies for controlling a phenomenon, the paper will also be able to highlight values surrounding the phenomenon. The ambition is to understand how institutions, authorities and organizations handle practical forms of knowledge that are aimed to implement a particular policy or working method within the welfare system.

          Findings

          One important aspect of the findings is the ways in which these official political discourses link the issues of migration and the shortages of staff in elderly care. But also visualize factors in how the government bodies with the formal responsibilities and authorities express their concerns about these links and the quality of the elderly care more generally.

          Originality/value

          It is well-known that migrants are employed to take care of the growing population of elderly in Europe. In Spain and Italy, for example, immigrants are frequently employed directly by families to care for their elderly family members. This type of employment entails a series of new social risks. The most important of those risks is the global “care chain” that these arrangements incur for the sending families, who lose a family member on whom they depend. This paper is connecting the international research on the global “care chain,” but focuses on the Swedish context, where the migrants already are established and elderly care work is not linked to migration in the same way. However, the experience of migration and the importance of transnational and cultural knowledge can be influential in understanding the changing processes in Swedish elderly care, not the least as the question of staff recruitment has been linked to migration by the highest political levels.

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          Most cited references45

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: not found
          • Article: not found

          The Choice Revolution: Privatization of Swedish Welfare Services in the 1990s

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            Formations of Class and Gender. Becoming Respectable

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              • Record: found
              • Abstract: not found
              • Book: not found

              The Birth of Biopolitics. Lecture at the College de France, 1978–1979

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                IJMHSC
                10.1108/IJMHSC
                International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care
                IJMHSC
                Emerald Publishing
                1747-9894
                1747-9894
                15 September 2020
                15 September 2020
                : 16
                : 3
                : 269-278
                Affiliations
                [1]Department of Social Work, Malmö Universitet , Malmo, Sweden
                Author notes
                Linda Lill can be contacted at: linda.lill@mau.se
                Article
                648301 IJMHSC-04-2019-0042.pdf IJMHSC-04-2019-0042
                10.1108/IJMHSC-04-2019-0042
                d6eb8f48-7beb-4459-8ac3-473db471f6d0
                © Emerald Publishing Limited
                History
                : 03 April 2019
                : 10 January 2020
                : 02 June 2020
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 50, Pages: 1, Words: 5707
                Categories
                e-viewpoint, Viewpoint
                cat-HSC, Health & social care
                cat-VG, Vulnerable groups
                cat-IDMG, Inequalities & diverse/minority groups
                cat-SOCY, Sociology
                cat-RES, Race & ethnic studies
                cat-MIN, Minorities
                cat-SOCY, Sociology
                cat-RES, Race & ethnic studies
                cat-MLT, Multiculturalism
                cat-SOCY, Sociology
                cat-RES, Race & ethnic studies
                cat-RIL, Racial identity
                cat-SOCY, Sociology
                , Work
                , economy & organizations
                cat-LMOV, Labour movements
                Custom metadata
                M
                Web-ready article package
                Yes
                Yes
                JOURNAL
                included

                Elderly care,Migrants,Staff shortage,Social risks,Social politics

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