Family Duties and Job Flexibility: Tradeoffs for Chinese Urban, Educated Mothers with Toddlers

Author:

Kim Sungwon1,Zhang Cong2,Yoshikawa Hirokazu3,Fong Vanessa L.4,Way Niobe5,Chen Xinyin6,Ke Xiaoyan7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Education, Yonsei University, 50 Yonsei-ro, Sinchon-dong, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul, South Korea, 03722 ().

2. Corresponding author: School of Social Development and Public Policy, Fudan University, 220 Handan Road, Shanghai, China, 200433 ().

3. Applied Psychology, New York University, 726 Broadway, 5th Floor, New York, NY, USA, 10003 ().

4. Department of Anthropology and Sociology, Amherst College, Amherst, MA, USA, 01002-5000 ().

5. Applied Psychology, New York University, East Building, Suite 400, 239 Greene Street, New York, NY, USA, 10003 ().

6. Applied Psychology-Human Development Division, Graduate School of Education, University of Pennsylvania, 3700 Walnut St., Philadelphia, PA, USA, 19104-6216 ().

7. Nanjing Brain Hospital, 264 Guangzhou Road, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China, 210029 ().

Abstract

Drawing on survey and interview data from mothers of 14-month infants in Nanjing, China, we explore women’s job trajectories as they juggle work and family responsibilities. Four profiles that emerge among our sample of 371 mothers (high stability, rapid cyclers, high-paid wage-growth, and intermittent) reflected not only their work career trajectories but also their different strategies of managing work-family balance. High-stability mothers were more likely than the other three groups to work in state-owned enterprises and experience a negative work climate. They illustrate how China’s changing economy shape work preferences of mothers who value interest and self-fulfillment, but pursue stability to accommodate their childrearing responsibilities.

Publisher

University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Anthropology,Social Psychology

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