205
Views
1
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Research Article

“Revealing the extraordinary in the ordinary”: rhythmanalysis and employment related geographical mobilities of Newfoundland and Labrador home care workers

ORCID Icon
Pages 119-134 | Received 16 Nov 2019, Accepted 30 Jul 2020, Published online: 28 Aug 2020

References

  • Anthony, A., and P. Milone-Nuzzo. 2005. “Factors Attracting and Keeping Nurses in Home Care.” Home Healthcare Now 23 (6): 372–377. doi:10.1097/00004045-200506000-00009.
  • Armstrong, P., H. Armstrong, and K. Scott-Dixon. 2008. Critical to Care: The Invisible Women in Health Services. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • Aronson, J., and S. Neysmith. 1996. ““You’re Not Just in There to Do the Work”: Depersonalizing Policies and the Exploitation of Home Care Workers’ Labour.” Gender & Society 10 (1): 59–77. doi:10.1177/089124396010001005.
  • Atanackovic, J., and I. L. Bourgeault. 2014. “Economic and Social Integration of Immigrant Live-in Caregivers in Canada.” IRPP, 46 (Apr.). https://irpp.org/wp-content/uploads/assets/research/diversity-immigration-and-integration/atanackovic-bourgeault-no46/study-no46.pdf
  • Cloutier, E., H. David, E. Ledoux, M. Bourdouxhe, I. Gagnon, and F. Quellet. 2008. “Effects of Government Policies on the Work of Home Care Personnel and Their Occupational Health and Safety.” Work 30 (4): 389–402.
  • Cohen, M., A. McLaren, Z. Sharman, S. Murray, M. Hughes, and A. Ostry. 2006. From Support to Isolation: The High Cost of BC’s Declining Home Support Services. Victoria: Canadian Centre for Policy Research No. 15. http://www.policyalternatives.ca/sites/default/files/uploads/publications/BC_Office_Pubs/bc_2006/support_to_isolation_summary.pdf
  • Cohen, R. L. 2010. “Rethinking ‘Mobile Work’: Boundaries of Space, Time, and Social Relation in the Working Lives of Mobile Hairstylists.” Work, Employment & Society 24 (1): 65–84. doi:10.1177/0950017009353658.
  • Cranford, C. J., L. F. Vosko, and N. Zukewich. 2003. “Precarious Employment in the Canadian Labour Market: A Statistical Portrait”. Just Labour 3, 6–22. Fall. doi: 10.25071/1705-1436.164.
  • Cresswell, T. 2010. “Towards a Politics of Mobility.” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 28 (1): 17–31. doi:10.1068/d11407.
  • Cresswell, T., S. Dorow, and S. Roseman. 2016. “Putting Mobility Theory to Work: Conceptualizing Employment-related Geographical Mobility.” Environment & Planning A 48 (9): 1787–1803. doi:10.1177/0308518X16649184.
  • De Groot, K., E. E. M. Maurits, and A. L. Francke. 2018. “Attractiveness of Working in Home Care: An Online Focus Group Study among Nurses.” Health & Social Care in the Community 26 (1): e94–e101. doi:10.1111/hsc.12481.
  • Denton, M., I. U. Zeytinoglu, S. Davies, and J. Lian. 2002. “Job Stress and Job Dissatisfaction of Home Care Workers in the Context of Health Care Restructuring.” International Journal of Health Services 32 (2): 327–357. doi:10.2190/VYN8-6NKY-RKUM-L0XW.
  • Doniol-Shaw, G., and E. Lada. 2011. “Work Schedules of Home Care Workers for the Elderly in France: Fragmented Work, Deteriorating Quality of Care, Detrimental Health Impact.” Work 40 (Supplement 1): 31–46. doi:10.3233/WOR-2011-1266.
  • Dorow, S., S. Roseman, and T. Cresswell. 2017. “Re‐working Mobilities: Emergent Geographies of Employment‐related Mobility.” Geography Compass 11 (12): e12350. doi:10.1111/gec3.12350.
  • Edensor, T. 2010. “Introduction: Thinking about Rhythm and Space.” In Geographies of Rhythm: Nature, Place Mobilities and Bodies, edited by T. Edensor, 1–18. Farnham: Ashgate.
  • England, K., and I. Dyck. 2012. “Migrant Workers in Home Care: Routes, Responsibilities, and Respect.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 102 (5): 1076–1083. doi:10.1080/00045608.2012.659935.
  • Ferguson, H. 2016. “Professional Helping as Negotiation in Motion: Social Work as Work on the Move.” Applied Mobilities 1 (2): 193–206. doi:10.1080/23800127.2016.1247523.
  • Fitzpatrick, K., and B. Neis. 2015. “On the Move and Working Alone: Policy Implications of the Experiences of Unionised Newfoundland and Labrador Homecare Workers.” Policy and Practice in Health and Safety 13 (2): 47–67. doi:10.1080/14774003.2015.11667817.
  • Government of Newfoundland and Labrador. 2005. “Provincial Home Support Program Operations Standards (2005).” http://www.health.gov.nl.ca/health/publications/home_support_manual.pdf
  • Haan, M., D. Walsh, and B. Neis. 2014. “At the Crossroads: Geography, Gender and Occupational Sector in Employment-related Geographical Mobility.” Canadian Studies in Population 41 (3–4): 6–21. doi:10.25336/P6G60D.
  • Hannam, K., M. Sheller, and J. Urry. 2006. “Editorial: ‘Mobilities, Immobilities and Moorings’.” Mobilities 1 (1): 1–22. doi:10.1080/17450100500489189.
  • Hanson, S., and G. Pratt. 1995. Gender, Work, and Space. New York: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9780203397411.
  • Hornsey, R. 2010. “‘He Who Thinks in Modern Traffic Is Lost’: Automation and the Pedestrian Rhythms in Interwar London.” In Geographies of Rhythm: Nature, Place, Mobilities and Bodies, edited by T. Edensor, 99–112. Farnham: Ashgate.
  • King, R., and A. Lulle. 2015. “Rhythmic Island: Latvian Migrants in Guernsey and Their Enfolded Patterns of Space‐time Mobility.” Population, Space and Place 21 (7): 599–611. doi:10.1002/psp.1915.
  • Lefebvre, H., Elden, S. 2004. Rhythmanalysis: Space, Time and Everyday Life. Translated By. Bloomsbury: London.
  • Lefebvre, H., and C. Levich. 1987. “The Everyday and Everydayness.” Yale French Studies 73 (73): 7–11. doi:10.2307/2930193.
  • Lilly, M. B. 2008. “Medical versus Social Work-places: Constructing and Compensating the Personal Support Worker across Health Care Settings in Ontario, Canada.” Gender, Place & Culture 15 (3): 285–299. doi:10.1080/09663690801996288.
  • Lutz, H., and E. Palenga-Möllenbeck. 2010. “Care Work Migration in Germany: Semi-compliance and Complicity.” Social Policy and Society 9 (3): 419–430. doi:10.1017/S1474746410000138.
  • Macdonald, M., P. R. Sinclair, and D. Walsh. 2013. “Labour Migration and Mobility in Newfoundland: Social Transformation and Community in Three Rural Areas.” In Social Transformation in Rural Canada: Community, Culture and Collective Action, edited by J. Parkins and M. Reed, 110–130. Vancouver: UBC Press.
  • Marcu, S. 2017. “Tears of Time: A Lefebvrian Rhythmanalysis Approach to Explore the Mobility Experiences of Young Eastern Europeans in Spain.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 42 (3): 405–416. doi:10.1111/tran.12174.
  • Martin-Matthews, A. 2010. “Time Matters: Negotiating Daily Life and the Work Day for Elderly Clients and Their Home Support Workers.” Generations Review, October. http://www.Britishgerontology.org/DB/gr-Editions-2/generationsreview/time-Matters-Negotiating-Daily-Life-and-the-Work-d.Html
  • McDowell, L. 2009. Working Bodies: Interactive Service Employment and Workplace Identities. Malden: Wiley.
  • McGuckin, N., and Y. Nakamoto. 2004. “Trips, Chains and Tours-using an Operational Definition.” Paper presented at the National Household Travel Survey Conference, http://onlinepubs.trb.org/onlinepubs/archive/conferences/nhts/McGuckin.pdf
  • Mels, T. 2004. “Lineages of a Geography of Rhythms.” In Reanimating Places: A Geography of Rhythms, edited by T. Mels, 3–42. New York: Routledge.
  • Neis, B., L. Barber, K. Fitzpatrick, N. Hanson, C. Knott, S. Premji, and E. Thorburn. 2018. “Fragile Synchronicities: Diverse, Disruptive and Constraining Rhythms of Employment-related Geographical Mobility, Paid and Unpaid Work in the Canadian Context.” Gender, Place & Culture 25 (8): 1175–1192. doi:10.1080/0966369X.2018.1499616.
  • Nilsson, M., and M. Hertzum. 2005. “Negotiated Rhythms of Mobile Work: Time, Place and Work Schedules.” Proceedings of the 2005 International ACM SIGGROUP Conference on Supporting Group Work (GROUP 2005), Sanibel Island, FL, 148–157. doi:10.1145/1099203.1099233.
  • Pelzelmayer, K. 2016. “Places of Difference: Narratives of Heart-felt Warmth, Ethnicisation, and Female Care-migrants in Swiss Live-in Care.” Gender, Place & Culture 23 (12): 1701–1712. doi:10.1080/0966369X.2016.1249351.
  • Reid-Musson, E. 2018. “Intersectional Rhythmanalysis: Power, Rhythm, and Everyday Life.” Progress in Human Geography 42 (6): 881–897. doi:10.1177/0309132517725069.
  • Rodgers, G. 1989. “Precarious Work in Western Europe. The State of the Debate, Jobs in Labour Market.” In Precarious Jobs in Labour Market Regulation: The Growth of Atypical Employment in Western Europe, edited by G. Rodgers and J. Rodgers, 1–16. Brussels:International Institute for Labour Studies, Free University of Brussels.
  • Roseman, S., P. G. Barber, and B. Neis. 2015. “Towards a Feminist Political Economy Framework for Analyzing Employment-related Geographical Mobility.” Studies in Political Economy 95 (1): 175–203. doi:10.1080/19187033.2015.11674951.
  • Sharman, Z., A. Tigar McLaren, M. Cohen, and A. Ostry. 2008. ““We Only Own the Hours”: Discontinuity of Care in the British Columbia Home Support System.” Canadian Journal on Aging 27 (1): 89–99. doi:10.3138/cja.27.1.89.
  • Sheller, M., and J. Urry. 2016. “Mobilizing the New Mobilities Paradigm.” Applied Mobilities 1 (1): 10–25. doi:10.1080/23800127.2016.1151216.
  • Simpson, P. 2008. “Chronic Everyday Life: Rhythmanalysing Street Performance.” Social & Cultural Geography 9 (7): 807–829. doi:10.1080/14649360802382578.
  • Sims-Gould, J., and A. Martin-Matthews. 2010. “Strategies Used by Home Support Workers in the Delivery of Care to Elderly Clients.” Canadian Journal on Aging/La Revue Canadienne Du Vieillissement 29 (1): 97–107. doi:10.1017/s0714980809990353.
  • Smith, R. J., and T. Hall. 2016. “Mobilities at Work: Care, Repair, Movement and a Fourfold Typology.” Applied Mobilities 1 (2): 147–160. doi:10.1080/23800127.2016.1246897.
  • Spalding, N. J., and T. Phillips. 2007. “Exploring the Use of Vignettes: From Validity to Trustworthiness.” Qualitative Health Research 17 (7): 954–962. doi:10.1177/1049732307306187.
  • Spinney, J. 2010. “Improvising Rhythms: Re-reading Urban Time and Space through Everyday Practices of Cycling.” In Geographies of Rhythm: Nature, Place, Mobilities and Bodies, edited by T. Edensor, 113–127. Farnham: Ashgate.
  • Syring, D. 2009. “La Vida Matizada: Time Sense, Everyday Rhythms, and Globalized Ideas of Work.” Anthropology and Humanism 34 (2): 119–142. doi:10.1111/j.1548-1409.2009.01034.x.
  • Tarricone, R., and A. D. Tsouros. 2008. The Solid Facts: Home Care in Europe. Copenhagen, Denmark: World Health Organization. http://www.euro.who.int/__data/assets/pdf_file/0005/96467/E91884.pdf
  • Temple-Newhook, J., B. Neis, L. A. Jackson, S. Roseman, P. Romanow, and C. Vincent. 2011. “Employment-related Mobility and the Health of Workers, Families, and Communities: The Canadian Context.” Labour/Le Travail 67: 121–156.
  • Twigg, J. 2002. Bathing–the Body and Community Care. London: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9780203190876.
  • Wiles, J. 2003. “Daily Geographies of Caregivers: Mobility, Routine, Scale.” Social Science & Medicine 57 (7): 1307–1325. doi:10.1016/S0277-9536(02)00508-7.
  • Wood, L. A., R. J. Smith, and T. Hall. 2016. “Work on the Move: Editors’ Introduction to the Special Issue.” Applied Mobilities 1 (2): 139–146. doi:10.1080/23800127.2016.1250371.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.