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National heroes, disposable workers. How collective action in the health and social care sector during the pandemic negotiated with the self‐sacrificing worker ideal
Author(s)
Date Issued
2024-03
Date Available
2024-10-25T15:51:03Z
Abstract
During the pandemic, the ideal of the self‐sacrificing health and social care worker became both more powerful and more unsustainable than ever. This article explores the manner and extent to which health and social care workers collectively challenged this ideal. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in Italy, this paper discusses mobilizations organized within three occupations: doctors in training, nurses, and social care workers. The study finds that collective action partially rejected and partially reproduced the self‐sacrificing worker ideal. Moreover, it shows how inequality regimes, imposing this ideal through classist, gendered, ageist, and racist‐nationalist processes in a pattern specific to each occupation, fundamentally shape the ways in which the ideal is challenged, as does the political culture of the groups organizing the mobilizations.
Sponsorship
European Research Council
European Commission Horizon 2020
Other Sponsorship
Open access funding provided by IReL.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
Gender, Work & Organization
Volume
31
Issue
2
Start Page
606
End Page
624
Copyright (Published Version)
2022 the Authors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0968-6673
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Galanti_2022_National-heroes-disposable-workers.pdf
Size
288.85 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
815308cdc7d4ef42f63b450bceae0e04
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