Drawing on a virtual ethnography, we explore how the increase in remote working has created unequal domestic rearrangements of parenting duties with respect to gender relations during the COVID-19 lockdown in Italy. We also discuss the resources that mothers have mobilized to create a network of social support in the organization of care.
BernhardtENoackTLyngstadTH (2008) Shared housework in Norway and Sweden: advancing the gender revolution. Journal of European Social Policy18(3): 275–288.
2.
BianchiSMSayerLCMilkieMA, et al. (2012) Housework: Who did, does or will do it, and how much does it matter?Social Forces91(1): 55–63.
3.
BlaskóZPapadimitriouEMancaAR (2020) How Will the COVID-19 Crisis Affect Existing Gender Divides in Europe?Luxembourg: European Union.
4.
ChesleyN (2017) What does it mean to be a ‘breadwinner’ mother?Journal of Family Issues38(18): 2594–2619.
5.
Eurostat (2019) How do women and men use their time.
6.
FraserN (2016) ‘Contradictions of capital and care’. New Left Review (100): 99–117.
ManzoLKC (2019) Constituting SWIG Ireland: community, social capital and academic citizenship. Irish Geography52(1): 111–115.
10.
ManzoLKC (2020) CITY-OF-CARE, Marie Skłodowska-curie project 890603.
11.
McEwanCGoodmanMK (2010) Place geography and the ethics of care: introductory remarks on the geographies of ethics, responsibility and care. Ethics, Place & Environment13(2): 103–112.
12.
Piedad UrdinolaBTovarJA (2019) Time Use and Transfers in the Americas: Producing, Consuming, and Sharing Time Across the Genders. Basel: Springer.