Travail, genre et sociétés (TGS)
Journal Descriptions
Posing the question of gender difference in the social sciences of work and inviting reflection on work in the field of gender research, deciphering, on the basis of the hierarchies, divisions and segmentations that run through the world of work, the status of men and women in society, and thus posing the question of gender difference: this is the founding hypothesis of Work, Gender and Societies.. Our journal aims to be multi-disciplinary, international and open to the different currents running through these fields of research. In this sense, Work, Gender and Societies is not the journal of one school, but that of a field of research. Like the Groupement de Recherche Européen Mage-CNRS, which was behind its creation, the journal is there to encourage confrontations between researchers with different, even opposing, positions and theoretical options. At the heart of the debate is the question of inequality. On the one hand, the feminization of the workforce, the tertiarization of society and the transformation of women's relationship to employment; on the other, the rise of massive unemployment and underemployment, the casualization of employment status and the flexibilization of working conditions. At the heart of these contradictory changes, female employment is evolving like a persistent paradox: more women are working, employed and educated, but also more women are unemployed, in precarious situations and underemployed. Men's and women's work patterns are becoming more homogenous, but inequalities in the workplace and in the family are becoming more entrenched. This review comes at a key moment in the evolution of the wage society, in a critical phase in the history of women's work.
Travail, genre et sociétés (TGS) is :-
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International, Peer-Reviewed, Open Access, Refereed, Gender Studies, Sociology, Labor Studies, Employment Studies, Social Policy, Industrial Relations , Online or Print , Bi-Annual Journal
- UGC Approved, ISSN Approved: P-ISSN P-ISSN: 1294-6303, E-ISSN: 2105-2174, Established: 1995,
- Provides Crossref DOI
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Not indexed in Scopus, WoS, DOAJ, PubMed, UGC CARE