Abstract
In Japan the ideology of familism has reproduced patriarchal family values.
It successfully retained family centred welfare provision and gender
inequality in informal care work, and ensured formal care services were
residual. However, the advancement of modernisation has weakened the
effectiveness of the informal care sector, and the demand for care has
increased steadily along with the ageing of the population. Moreover,
informal care based on the self-sacrifice of family carers tends to be less
popular. This tendency is especially evident in the opinions of the younger
generation and females. Furthermore, structural shifts in their working
circumstances, particularly of females, makes the continuation of the
patriarchal approach to informal care more difficult. In the field of the
care of older people, as part of the strategy for restructuring the Japanese
welfare system, the emphasis is now more on market activities, which is
in accord with the assumptions underlying ‘the residual welfare model of
social policy’ (Titmuss, 1974).
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Public Administration,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Cited by
18 articles.
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