Abel, E. (1991). Who cares for the elderly? Public policy and the experiences of adult daughters. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
2.
Berk, R. , & Berk, S. F. (1979). Labor and leisure at home: Content and organization of the household day. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.
3.
Blankenhorn, D. (1995). Fatherless America: Confronting our most urgent social problem. New York: Basic Books.
4.
Cancian, F. M. , & Oliker, S. J. (2000). Caring and gender. London: Pine Forge Press.
5.
Casper, L. M. , & Smith, K. E. (2002). Dispelling the myths: Self-care, class, and race. Journal of Family Issues, 23, 716-727.
6.
Center for the Childcare Workforce . (1998). Worthy work, unlivable wages: The national child care staffing study. Washington, DC: Author.
7.
Coontz, S. (1992). The way we never were: American families and the nostalgia trap. New York: Basic Books.
8.
Dalla Costa, M. , & James, S. (1973). The power of women and the subversion of the community (2nd ed.). Bristol, UK: Falling Wall Press.
9.
Detinger, E. , & Clarkberg, M. (in press). Informal caregiving and retirement timing among men and women: Gender and caregiving relationships in late midlife. Journal of Family Issues.
10.
Dizard, J. , & Gadlin, H. (1990). The minimal family. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press.
11.
Ehrenreich, B. (2001). Nickled and dimed: On (not) getting by in America. New York: Metropolitan.
12.
Ehrensaft, D. (1987). Parenting together: Men and women sharing the care of their children. New York: Free Press.
13.
Ehrensaft, D. (1997). Spoiling the child: How well-meaning parents are giving children too much—but not what they need. New York: Guilford.
14.
Ellwood, D. T. (1988). Poor support: Poverty in the American family. New York: Basic Books.
15.
Eriksen, S. , & Gerstel, N. (in press). A labor of love or labor itself: Care work among adult brothers and sisters. Journal of Family Issues.
16.
Fischer, C. S. (in press). Ever more rooted Americans. City and Community.
17.
Folbre, N. (2001). The invisible heart: Economics and family values. New York: New Press.
18.
Fraser, N. , & Gordon, L.1994. A genealogy of dependency: Tracing a keyword of the U.S. welfare state. Signs, 19(2), 309-336.
19.
Garey, A. I. (1999). Weaving work and motherhood. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
20.
Garey, A. I. (2002). Social domains and concepts of care: Protection, instruction, and containment in after-school programs. Journal of Family Issues, 23, 768-788.
21.
Gerson, K. (1985). Hard choices: How women decide about work, career, and motherhood. Berkeley: University of California Press.
22.
Gerstel, N. , & Gross, H. (1984). Commuter marriage. New York: Guilford.
23.
Glass, J. L , & Estes, S. B. (1997). The family responsive workplace. Annual Review of Sociology, 24, 289-313.
24.
Glazer, N. (1990). The home as workshop: Women as amateur nurses and medical care providers. Gender & Society, 4, 479-499.
25.
Glenn, E. N. (2001). Creating a caring society. Contemporary Sociology, 29, 84-94.
26.
Glick-Schiller, N. (1998). The invisible women: Caregiving and AIDS. In K. V. Hansen & A. I. Garey (Eds.), Families in the U.S.: Kinship and domestic politics (pp. 539-556). Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
27.
Goldscheider, F. , & Goldscheider, C. (1993). Whose nest? A two-generational view of leaving home during the 1980s. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 55, 851-862.
28.
Goldscheider, F. , & Goldscheider, C. (1994, March). Leaving and returning home in the twentieth century. (Population Bulletin Vol. 48, No. 4). Washington, DC: Population Reference Bureau.
29.
Gordon, L. (1994). Pitied but not entitled: Single mothers and the history of welfare, 1890-1935. New York: Free Press.
30.
Hansen, K. V. (2001). Class contingencies in networks of care for children (Working Paper Series No. 27). Berkeley: University of California, Center for Working Families.
31.
Hansen, K. V. (2002). Staging reciprocity and mobilizing networks in working families (Working Paper Series No. 35). Berkeley: University of California, Center for Working Families.
32.
Harrington, M. (2000). Care and equality: Inventing new family politics. New York: Routledge.
33.
Hays, S.1996. The cultural contradictions of motherhood. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
34.
Hernandez, D. J. , & Myers, D. E. (1993). America's children: Resources from family, government, and the economy. New York: Russell Sage.
35.
Hertz, R. (1986). More equal than others: Women and men in dual-career marriages. Berkeley: University of California Press.
36.
Hertz, R. , & Marshall, N. L. (2001). Working families: The transformation of the American home. Berkeley: University of California Press.
37.
Hochschild, A. R. , & Machung, A. (1989). The second shift: Working parents and the revolution at home. New York: Viking.
38.
Hondagneu-Sotelo, P. (2001). Domestica: Immigrant workers cleaning and caring in the shadows of affluence. Berkeley: University of California Press.
39.
Isaksen, L. W. (in press). Toward a sociology of (gendered) disgust: Images of bodily decay and the social organization of care work. Journal of Family Issues.
40.
Jencks, C. (1997). The hidden paradox of welfare reform. American Prospect, 32, 33-40.
41.
Kane, R. A. (1995). High-tech home care in context: Organizations, quality and ethical ramifications. In J. D. Arras, W. H. Porterfield, & L. O. Porterfield (Eds.), Bringing the hospital home: Ethical and social implications of high-tech home care (pp. 197-219). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
42.
Kittay, E. F. (1999). Love's labor: Essays on women, equality, and dependency. New York: Routledge.
43.
Kurz, D. (2002). Caring for teenage children. Journal of Family Issues, 23, 748-767.
44.
Lan, P.-C. (in press). Subcontracting filial piety: Elder care in ethnic Chinese immigrant families in California. Journal of Family Issues.
45.
Macdonald, C. (1996). Shadow mothers: Nannies, au pairs and invisible work. In C. Macdonald & C. Sirianni (Eds.), Working in the service society (pp. 244-263). Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
46.
Macdonald, C. (1998). Manufacturing motherhood: The shadow work of nannies and au pairs. Qualitative Sociology, 21, 25-53.
47.
Macdonald, C. , & Merrill, D. (2002). “It shouldn't have to be a trade”: Recognition and redistribution in care work advocacy. Hypatia, 17, 67-83.
48.
Parrenas, R. S. (2001). Servants of globalization: Women, migration, and domestic work. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
49.
Phillips, D. A. , Howes, C., & Whitebook, M.1991. Child care as an adult work environment. Journal of Social Issues, 47, 49-70.
50.
Polatnick, M. R. (2002). Too old for child care? Too young for self-care? Negotiating after-school arrangements for middle school. Journal of Family Issues, 23, 728-747.
51.
Popenoe, D. (1992). Modern marriage: Revising the script (Council on Families in America Working Paper No. WP17). New York: Institute for American Values.
52.
Roschelle, A. R. (1997). No more kin: Exploring race, class, and gender in family networks. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
53.
Rubin, L. B. (2001). Getting younger while getting older: Family-building at midlife. In R. Hertz & N. Marshall (Eds.), Working families: The transformation of the American home (pp. 42-57). Berkeley: University of California Press.
54.
Schnaiberg, A. , & Goldenberg, S. (1989). From empty nest to crowded nest: The dynamics of incompletely-launched young adults. Social Problems, 36, 251-269.
55.
Skocpol, T. (1992). Protecting soldiers and mothers: The political origins of social policy in the United States. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press.
56.
Stone, D. (2000a). Reframing health-care policy. Cambridge, MA: Radcliffe Public Policy Center, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University.
57.
Stone, D. (2000b, March 13). Why we need a care movement. The Nation, pp. 13-15.
58.
Townsend, N. W. (2002). The package deal: Men, marriage, and fatherhood. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
59.
Tronto, J. (1993). Moral boundaries: A political argument for an ethnic of care. New York: Routledge.
60.
Tuominen, M. (2000). The conflicts of caring: Gender, race, ethnicity, and individualism in family child-care work. In M. H. Meyer (Ed.), Care work: Gender, class, and the welfare state (pp. 112-135). New York: Routledge.
61.
Ungerson, C. (1997). The commodification of care: Current policies and future politics. In B. Hobson & A. Berggren (Eds.), Crossing borders: Gender and citizenship in transition. Stockholm: Swedish Council for Planning and Coordination.
62.
United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Development, Statistics Division . (1991). Demographic yearbook 1991. New York: Author.
63.
Uttal, L. (1998). Racial safety and cultural maintenance: The child care concerns of employed mothers of color. In K. V. Hansen & A. I. Garey (Eds.), Families in the U.S.: Kinship and domestic politics (pp. 597-606). Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
64.
Uttal, L. , & Tuominen, M. (1999). Tenuous relationships: Exploitation, emotion, and racial ethnic significance in paid child care work. Gender & Society, 13, 758-780.
65.
Waerness, K. (1984). The rationality of caring. Economic and Industrial Democracy, 5, 185-211.
66.
West, R. (1997). Caring for justice. New York: New York University Press.
67.
Zelizer, V. A. (1985). Pricing the priceless child: The changing social value of children. New York: Basic Books.