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This article explores the ways in which state social provision affects gender relationships and contributes to the formation and mobilization of identities and interests. It presents a conceptual framework for analyzing the gender content of social provision, incorporating elements from feminist and mainstream work. The article examines the state-market-family relations, stratification, and social citizenship dimensions, highlighting the need for a more nuanced understanding of the impacts of welfare states on both men and women.
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Gender and the Social Rights of Citizenship: The Comparative Analysis of Gender Relations and Welfare States Author(s): Ann Shola Orloff Reviewed work(s): Source: American Sociological Review, Vol. 58, No. 3 (Jun., 1993), pp. 303-328 Published by: American Sociological Association Stable URL: http:/...
Gender and the Social Rights of Citizenship: The Comparative Analysis of Gender Relations and Welfare States Author(s): Ann Shola Orloff Reviewed work(s): Source: American Sociological Review, Vol. 58, No. 3 (Jun., 1993), pp. 303-328 Published by: American Sociological Association Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2095903. Accessed: 04/07/2012 07:39 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at. http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].. American Sociological Association is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to American Sociological Review. http://www.jstor.org GENDER AND TIE SOCIAL RIGHTS OF CITIZENSHIP: THE COMPARATIVEANALYSIS OF GENDER RELATIONSAND WELFARE STATES* ANN SHOLA ORLOFF Universityof Wisconsin State social provision affects women's material situations, shapes gender relationships, structures political conflict and participation, and contributes to the formation and mo- bilization of identities and interests. Mainstream comparative research has neglected gender, while most feminist research on the welfare state has not been systematically comparative. I develop a conceptual framework for analyzing the gender content of so- cial provision that draws on feminist and mainstream work. Three dimensions of qualita- tive variation suggested by power resources analysts are reconstructed to incorporate gender: (1) the state-market relations dimension is extended to consider the ways coun- tries organize the provision of welfare through families as well as through states and markets; it is then termed the state-market-family relations dimension; (2) the stratifica- tion dimension is expanded to consider the effects of social provision by the state on gender relations, especially the treatment of paid and unpaid labor; (3) the social citi- zenship rights/decommodification dimension is criticizedfor implicit assumptions about the sexual division of caring and domestic labor and for ignoring the differential effects on men and women of benefits that decommodify labor Two additional dimensions are proposed to capture the effects of state social provision on gender relations: access to paidworkand capacityto formandmaintainan autonomoushousehold. No one who has listened to debates about gender relations to social provision by the the welfare state in the United States or state. Many recent analyses have recognized in other advanced capitalist and democratic that states regulate gender relations in the la- countries- about "welfaremothers"or child- bor market,polity, family, and elsewhere (Wil- care support- could doubt the importanceof son 1977; Peattieand Rein 1983; Shaver 1983; Ruggie 1984; Piven 1985; Pascall 1986; Sapiro *Direct all correspondenceto Ann Shola Orloff, Departmentof Sociology, University of Wisconsin, 1986; Connell 1987; Sassoon 1987; Gordon 1180 ObservatoryDrive, Madison,WI 53706. This 1988a, 1988b, 1990; Pateman 1988a; Abro- researchwas partiallysupportedby a grantfrom the movitz 1988; Laslett and Brenner 1989; Mink National Science Foundation(SES 8822352) and is 1990; Walby 1990; Orloff 1991; Lewis 1992; being carried out jointly with a project on "The Skocpol 1992). Theorists may disagree about Gender Regimes of Liberal Welfare States" with the causes of gender inequality and women's Dr. Sheila Shaver and Dr. Julia O'Connor). Earlier subordination, but few would deny that the versions of this paper were presentedat meetings, character of public social provision affects workshops,and seminarsin the United States, Swe- women's materialsituations,shapes gender re- den, Germany, and Australia. For their comments on draftsof this paper,I thank:JuliaAdams, Janeen Baxter, Jane Collins, Bob Connell, Linda Gordon, ern state social provision may be misleading be- Alex Hicks, BarbaraHobson, David James, Jane cause it assumes what must be proved - that states Jenson, TrudieKnijn, Walter Korpi, Marilyn Lake, promotethe welfare of their citizens throughsocial Christiane Lemke, Leslie McCall, Eileen policy - and also because it assumes that a com- McDonagh, Margit Meyer, Pavla Miller, Deborah mitment to public social provision, once estab- Mitchell, Renee Monson, Julia O'Connor, Joakim lished, is irreversible.Generally, the welfare state Palme, Wendy Sarvasy, Sheila Shaver, Birte Siim, is conceptualized as a state committed to modify- Theda Skocpol, BarbaraSullivan, Pamela Walters, ing the play of social or market forces in order to Dorothy Watson, and three ASR reviewers. Leslie achieve greaterequality (Ruggie 1984, p. 11). The McCall and HeatherHartley provided researchas- welfare state is often operationalizedas the collec- sistance. tion of social insurance and assistance programs I Using the term "welfarestate"to describe mod- that offer income protection to victims of unem- AmericanSociological Review, 1993, Vol. 58 (June:303-328) 303 304 AMERICANSOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW lationships, structures political conflict and stream comparative research on the welfare participation,and contributesto the formation state has considered gender relations, most and mobilization of specific identities and in- feminist researchon the welfare state has not terests. Many would also argue- and I would been comparative.Thus, not enough is known agree - that, as a result of varied political about how and to what extent systems of so- struggles, the state may also offer important cial provision actually do vary in their gender political resourcesto women and to other sub- content, how social provision and other state ordinate groups. Moreover, variation across institutionsaffect genderrelations,andhow the countriesand over time in the characterand ef- state's impact on gender relations is related to fects of social provisionon genderrelationshas its effects on other social relations. been considerableand significant. Conversationsbetween mainstreamwelfare Recent feminist work on social provision is state researchers and feminist researchers concerned with the extent to which welfare would benefit both groups,yet therehave been states have the potential to be or already are far too few structuredconfrontationsof con- "woman-friendly"(Hernes 1987), or, to pose ceptual frameworks and empirical findings the proposition somewhat differently,the ex- across the two bodies of scholarship.4Mutual tent to which - and how - they reproduce appreciationhas been hamperedby the differ- male dominance.2 Some analysts have high- ent analytic strategiespursuedby feminist and lighted the role of women's political agency in mainstreamscholars.Until recently,most femi- securing social rights based simply on citizen- nist empirical analyses of the welfare state ship. The recognition of the genderedcharac- have been case studies and have not engaged ters of the welfare state and social politics, and the conceptualframeworksand empiricalfind- of the agency of women, are importantcor- ings of the mainstreamliterature.5Moreover, rectives to the "mainstream"literatureon the they often emphasized the ways in which so- welfare state, which is all too often gender- blind in its conceptions of class, citizenship usually ignored gender differences and inequalities and the economy.3 Yet if little of the main- in social politics and policies, while feminist work has been premised on the importanceof gender in ployment, industrialaccident,retirement,disability,social and political life. ill health,deathof a family breadwinner,or extreme 4 Quadagno (1989) has confronted the assump- poverty; some analysts also include provision of tions of power resources analysis. Some other education and housing (Flora and Heidenheimer works also span feminist and mainstreamresearch: 1981). Despite these difficulties, I use the term to Gordon (1988a) discussed Piven and Cloward's maintain continuity with social-scientific and his-(1971) influentialwork from a feminist perspective; torical studies of the causes and effects of modernHobson (1990) examined women's economic de- pendence in OECD countries and how this is re- social provision. I define the welfare state, or state social provision, as interventions by the state in lated to efforts to decrease class inequality (the fo- cus of much of the mainstream comparative re- civil society to alter social and marketforces. How- ever, I do not judge a priori that all state social in- search); and Skocpol (1992) offered a gendered terventions are aimed at, or actually produce, analysis of American social provision of the late nineteenthand early twentiethcenturies in contrast greaterequality among citizens; I discuss this issue furtherbelow. to mainstreaminterpretations. 2 I preferto use the term "male-dominant," rather5 Feminist theory on the welfare state has come than "patriarchal,"to describe the gender order in from two camps, neitherof which has been particu- Western states in the late nineteenth and twentiethlarly engaged in scholarly debate with researchers centuries. Historically, "patriarchy"refers to "a carryingout empiricalinvestigations of the welfare form of male dominance in which fathers control state. First, a socialist-feminist group has debated Marxists about the characterof the system that the families and families are the units of social and eco- nomic power," not to "a universal, unchangingde- welfare state allegedly reinforces - a debate that terministic social structurewhich denies agency to is essentially an extension at an abstractlevel of the women" (Gordon 1988b, p. vi; see also Cockburn debates about capitalism and patriarchy(McIntosh 1990). 1978; for criticism of this approachand an exem- 3 Using terms like "mainstream"and "feminist" plary comparativeanalysis, see Jenson 1986). Sec- to describebodies of researchthatcontainstrikingly ond, women working in the area of democraticand divergent conceptual frameworksis an oversimpli- liberal theory have critiquedthe "masters"for their fication. My terminologyconveys an importantdif- nongendered analyses of citizenship and political ference in the two literatures:Mainstreamwork has participation(for a review, see Jones 1990). GENDERAND SOCIALRIGHTS 305 cial policies reflect and reinforce relations of the social rights of citizenship (Korpi 1989; dominance and exploitation, thus arguing for Esping-Andersen and Korpi 1987; Esping- understandingthe welfare state as functional Andersen 1985, 1989, 1990; Kangas 1991; for patriarchy and capitalism (Wilson 1977; Palme 1990; Myles 1989; Kolberg 1992). This McIntosh 1978; Abromovitz 1988).6 They work providesa bridgeto recentfeminist work were concerned with the qualitativeeffects of on the welfare statethatexaminesthe gendered modern social provision, but assumed invari- characterof social rights or claims on the state ance in the regulatory function of welfare andthe possibilitythatthese rightscan enhance states. the relative position of women (Piven 1985; Meanwhile, most comparativestudies of the Hernes 1987, 1988; Siim 1988; Gordon 1990; welfare state have focused on expendituredata Orloff 1991; Skocpol 1992; Shaver 1990; unsuitedto examiningpower relations,making Sarvasy 1992; O'Connorforthcoming).These it easier for feminist researchersto dismiss this social citizenship perspectives emphasize the work as irrelevant to their concerns. Indeed, potential of social provision in democratic mainstream scholars simply assume that the states, securedat least partiallythroughthe po- welfare state is a mechanismfor making soci- litical struggles of citizens and others, to ety moreegalitarian;they routinelyreferto sys- counterdominationeven as they acknowledge tems of social provision in Westerncapitalist that this potential is often far from being real- democraciesas "welfarestates,"taking at face ized. The programsof the modernwelfare state value the claims of stateelites aboutthe charac- differentiallyadvantagevarious social groups, ter of social programs. The extent to which and there is importantvariation across coun- states actually promotecitizens' well-being or tries and programs,as well as over time, in the equality beyond income security is rarely in- extent to which the interests of dominant and vestigated (Esping-Andersen 1990, chap. 1; subordinategroups are enhanced.In short, so- Cates 1983, chap. 1). Mainstreamscholarsmay cial citizenship analysts envision social policy have argued about the extent of equality pro- as having an emancipatoryas well as a regula- moted by social programs,but saw variationin tory potential.Even where emancipationis not linear terms - a state's "welfareeffort,"mea- a manifestobjective,social programsmay have sured by social expendituresas a proportionof unintended"independenceeffects." GNP, resulted in more or less equality,usually To understandthe mutualeffects of state so- conceptualizedin class or income terms. Until cial provision and gender relations requires a recently,then, the predominanttheoreticaland conceptualscheme that can be used in system- methodological approachesw-ithinthe two lit- atic comparativeresearch.Rather than devel- eraturestended to neglect qualitativevariation oping such a scheme anew, I would argue that in the effects of state social provisionover time it will be more fruitful to directly engage the and across nations. conceptual frameworksof mainstreamlitera- Recent methodological and theoretical ture and propose amendmentsthat will reflect changes within the two groups may increase what is already known about gender relations the chances of a fruitfulconversation.Feminist and the state. Feministresearchcan therebyin- research on the welfare state is taking a com- corporateadvancesin the mainstreamliterature parative turn, focusing on the variationin the while transformingit to incorporategender re- gender content of systems of social provision lations. (Ruggie 1984; Jenson 1986, 1991; Michel and I offer some critical reflections on the ana- Koven 1990; Lewis 1992; Skocpol and Ritter lytic categoriesof mainstreamcomparativeand 1991). Meanwhile, several mainstreamcom- historical research on the welfare state, espe- parative welfare state researchers, especially cially those employedby the influential"power those associated with the "power resources" resources"school of analysis. The power re- school of analysis, are focusing on variationin sources school has demonstratedin some care- 6 These feminist functionalist approaches are ful studies that "politics matter,"in contrastto similar to radical or Marxist functionalist ap- those thatcontendthat social policy simply re- proaches,which never dominatedmainstreamcom- flects the systemic "needs"of capitalist,indus- parative scholarship. However, the Marxists ig- trialized societies. Rather than enter into this nored genderjust as mainstreamscholars did (Offe debate, I concentrateon the power resources 1984; O'Connor 1973; Piven and Cloward 1971). group because they have developed a frame- 306 AMERICANSOCIOLOGICALREVIEW work for evaluating the content of social pro- vision on genderrelations- requiresnew con- vision, the "dependentvariable"if you will.7 ceptualcategories and analyticdimensions. The concern of the power resourcesanalysts Power resourcesresearchersbegin from the with qualitative ratherthan quantitativechar- premise that workersare oppressedby capital- acteristics of the welfare state is useful for in- ism, which transformslaborpower into a com- vestigating power relations, of paramountim- modity.However,politicalrightsin democratic portance in understandingthe relationshipbe- polities enable workers to mobilize to further tween state social provision and gender rela- their interests. These scholars build on Mar- tions. Over the last decade, scholars at the shall's (1950) distinctionbetween types of citi- Swedish Institute for Social Research, under zenship rights - civil, political, and social the direction of Korpi and Esping-Andersen, (Korpi 1989, p. 312; see also Hasenfeld, have assembled an impressive data set on the Rafferty,and Zald 1987).8The developmentof quality of social rights and how these rightsaf- social rights reversed the nineteenth-century fect differentcitizens in eighteen OECD coun- separation of social protection from citizen- tries for the period 1930 through 1985 (Korpi ship. Along with Marshall,they maintainthat 1989; Esping-Andersen1990). These countries this critical social transformationtook institu- include most of the rich capitalistcountriesthat tional form in a move away from poor relief to have been democraticsince WorldWarII. This modern social policies, like social insurance research group has formulated a systematic and universal benefits based on citizenship. scheme for comparativeanalysis of state sys- They link social rights based on citizenship to tems of social provision that focuses on three an accountof political mobilizationthat draws key dimensions: (1) state-marketrelations, (2) on Marxist and Weberiananalysis and the so- stratification,and (3) social citizenship rights, cial-democratictraditionsof parliamentaryso- including, in Esping-Andersen's (1990) cialism. They identify two major power re- scheme, how this affects the "decommodifica- sources in Westernsocieties: capital, an inher- tion" of labor. ently unequally distributedmarket-basedre- The power resources analysts' framework source, and the right to vote and organize for provides a good startingpoint for analyzingthe collective political action, a right that is pre- gender content of state social provision. But sumedto be equally distributedin democracies serious conceptual work must be done before (Korpi 1985). The class-relateddistributionof applyingit to the interrelationbetweenstate so- 8 Marshall(1950) defined citizenship as "a status cial provision and gender relations. I do not bestowed on those who are full membersof a com- mean that researchshould simply look at what munity,"and he saw citizens as "equalwith respect the welfare state does for or to women, al- to the rights and duties with which the status is en- though that is clearly part of the task. Rather, dowed." However, the content of citizenship rights gender must incorporatedinto the core con- varies because "no universal principle.. deter- cepts of researchon the welfare state - "citi- mines what those rights and duties shall be" (pp. zen," "social rights," "claims," "welfare" 28-29). Analyzing the experience of British work- and the analytic dimensions used to evaluate ing men over the last three centuries, Marshallpre- inputs, content, and effects. "Gendering"the sented an evolutionary argument about the devel- opment of civil, political, and social citizenship analytic framework means two things. First, rights (Barbalet 1988). He argued that in the eigh- because power resourcesanalysisdoes not con- teenth century,civil rights graduallyattachedto the sider genderrelations,its conceptualapparatus status of freedom already enjoyed by male mem- must be reworkedto incorporategender. Sec- bers of the community.Political rights - primarily ond, the key issue for a feminist analysisof the the franchise- were first grantedto propertyown- welfare state - the effects of state social pro- ers, but were extended to all citizens, including women, over the course of the nineteenthand early twentieth centuries (Marshall 1950, p. 20). Social 7Thus, to the question, "Why not pick on my rights - "the whole range from a modicum of eco- own perspective, state-centered or institutionalist nomic welfare and security to the right to share to analysis?,"I would say thatfew commentatorshave the full in the social heritageand to live the life of a dealt with its conceptualization of the content of civilised being according to the standardsprevail- welfare states. Rather, their attention has focused ing in the society" - which is associated with the on the role of characteristicsof the state in policy welfare state, are the productof twentieth-century developments. political changes (Marshall 1950, p. I 1). GENDERAND SOCIALRIGHTS 307 power resources explains variationin the out- differences, I think it is possible to focus on comes of political struggles for social rights the processes and institutions that most femi- (Korpi 1989). Capitalists have greater re- nist analysts agree are importantto gender re- sources in the market,while workers (because lations and that are affected by state policies. of their numbers)have greaterresourcesin the Fundamental to full social participation and polity. Wage earners,they argue, will use their self-determinationare control over one's body political resources to modify marketprocesses and bodily capacities (including sexuality and and extend social rights. Conversely, capital- reproduction)and the right to political partici- ists will fight to let market-basedprocesses de- pation. These are not central to the welfare termine welfare outcomes and to limit social state, but are part of the relevant context for rights. This is the theoretical context for the evaluatingthe effects of the state on gender re- claim that workers' political struggles can se- lations. Many institutions and processes con- cure social rights that "pushback the frontiers stitutegenderrelationsand are directlyaffected of capitalistpower"(Esping-Andersen1990, p. by state social provision:the sexual division of 16). This is accomplished by empowering labor(includingthe treatmentof care work and workers vis-a-vis the market- providing so- caseworkers),access to paid work (as a central cial benefits that "weakenthe whip of the mar- role in our societies and as a means of sur- ket" and promote working-class political soli- vival), and marriageand family relations.11In darity (Palme 1990, p. 8). Thus, the analytic the following pages, I discuss and critique the scheme for describing the content of the wel- power resources analysts' understanding of fare state is related to their theory of working- citizenship and their analytic scheme for de- class interests and the dynamics of social scribingsocial policy regimes, then propose an policy development - the scheme was devel- alternativescheme for evaluating and catego- oped to answer the question of how states af- rizing state social provision that can capture fect class relations. What of gender in the both class and gender effects.12 power resources framework?To put it bluntly, it is simply absent. Its concepts are explicitly sexuality and the concomitant compulsion for gender-neutral- but the categories of work- women to enter heterosexual relationships to ser- ers, state-marketrelations, stratification,citi- vice men's personal and sexual needs. Another zenship, and decommodificationare based on school of thoughtfocuses on genderdifferences and a male standard;moreover, gender relations the control of biological reproduction.Many femi- and their effects are ignored. nist political theoristshave been concerned with le- Feminists are interested in gendering the gal, political, and organizationalbarriersto gender equality, including women's subjugation to male questions and categories of the power re- family heads and exclusion from politics - both sources analysts. However, feminists are also participatorydecision-makingarenasand control of asking a different question: Can the welfare the means of administration and coercion. Still state alter gender relations?This question sug- other theorists focus on men's control of women's gests a differentresearchagendaand new con- labor throughthe sexual division of labor, exploit- ceptual categories. Feminist analysts are less ing women's economic dependence, and sex segre- unified aboutthe factorsthatunderliewomen's gation in occupations;these theorists are especially oppression than are mainstreamwelfare state concernedwith the relationshipbetween gender and class power. Of course, many analysts recognize analystson the factorsunderlyingclass oppres- that more than one dynamic is involved in produc- sion.9 This lack of agreement makes it more ing gender relations. (For overviews, see Walby difficult to specify just what the state would 1990; Connell 1987; Tong 1989; Collins 1991.) have to do to push back the frontiersof male 1 I focus on elements of social provision that dominance.10But despite importanttheoretical have a significant impact on gender relations, but these elements do not necessarily affect all women 9 The problem of specifying gender interests or or all men in the same ways (Spelman 1988; women's interests has troubled the feminist-influ- Crenshaw 1989; Harris 1990). These dimensions enced literature in political sociology (much as will need rethinkingand supplementationalso from specifying class interests has troubled mainstream the perspective of incorporatingracial and ethnic political sociologists) (Jonasdottir1988; Molyneux relations, which I do not here attempt. 1985). 12 I focus on the conceptualization of these di- 10One body of feminist theory highlights the im- mensions, ratherthan on their operationalizationin portance of men's control of women's bodies and empirical studies. The operationalizationpresents 308 AMERICANSOCIOLOGICALREVIEW CITIZENSHIPAND SOCIALPOLICYOR in his own past work and called for gendering "POLITICSAGAINSTMARKETS"13 these categories in future analyses (also see AND MALE DOMINANCE? Pateman 1988a, p. 232). An illustrationof the implicit male standard WhoIs a Citizen? appearedin recentcomparativeanalyses by the The political strugglesof citizens are criticalto Korpi-Esping-Andersenproject that focused the power resourcesanalysts' understandingof on the ways in which social rights affect "typi- policy developments. But just as the indepen- cal cases" because "legislative statements are dent male householderserves as the ideal-typi- difficult to compare"(Palme 1990, p. 27). The cal citizen in classical liberal and democratic "typical cases" used in the project's analyses theory, the male worker serves as the ideal- included "an 'average' production worker in typical citizen in the literatureon social rights manufacturingindustry"and the same worker (in Korpi 1989 or Esping-Andersen 1990 as with dependent spouse and two children much as in Marshall 1950). As Hernes notes, (Palme 1990; Korpi 1989, p. 315; Esping- "The social-democratic citizen is the citizen Andersen1990). Of course, because of prevail- worker, a male family provider, a working- ing sex segregationin occupations and house- class hero. His rights, identities and participa- hold composition, both these "average"work- tion patternswere determinedby his ties to the ers "happened"to be men. The analysts then labourmarket,and by the web of associations assessed the qualityof benefitsthatreplacelost and corporatestructureswhich had grown up income for these average citizens based on aroundthese ties" (1988, p. 190, emphases in their degree of labor marketparticipation,us- original). Indeed, "in the 'democratic'welfare ing average wages as a baseline.14 The social state... employment ratherthan military ser- rightsof citizens who are economically depen- vice is the key to citizenship"because it be- dent, the vast majority of whom are women, stows the independencethatis the "centralcri- were not considered.Analysts should not rest terion for citizenship" and is associated with with an adumbrationof social rights for "typi- men (Pateman 1988a, pp. 238-39). cal" worker-citizens- such engendered citi- Power resources analysis begins with eco- zens do not exist. Men make claims as worker- nomically independent citizens (i.e., wage citizens to compensatefor failures in the labor earners) and considers the cross-national,his- market;women make claims as workers, but torical, and class variationsin the ways social also as members of families, and they need rights affect them. Analysts focus on those as- programs especially to compensate for mar- pects of state social provisionthatare most rel- riage failures and/orthe need to raise children evant for male wage earnersand breadwinners, alone. that is, programsthat compensate workersfor losses incurredin the paid labor market,such Genderand CitizenshipRights as old-age pensions and unemploymentinsur- ance. They then examine the basis on which The power resourcesschool assumes that civil people make claims for state help -need, fi- and political rights are equally available to all nancial contributionor citizenship and the citizens to use in mobilizing to secure greater associated variationin outcomes. The use of a social rights. Thus, it ignores gender differ- male standardis not explicit, and power re- ences in access to civil and political rights, in- sources analysis - like most mainstreamcom- cluding the legal rights of personhood. Korpi parative researchon the welfare state - uses (1983) noted variationin the extent of formal gender-neutrallanguageand categories.Myles equality of citizenship rights but not with ref- (1989, pp. 135-36) acknowledgedthis problem erence to gender; Esping-Andersenmade no its own difficulties as currentdata on the welfare state usually address different issues. I do not ex- 14 The average wage was calculatedfrom data for pect a one-to-one relation between specific dimen- adult men and women in manufacturing;it assumed sions and a particularprogramof the welfare state. full-time, all-year work. Thus, the typical male Rather,these dimensions describe propertiesof en- standardof living was the benchmarkfor pension tire systems of social provision that vary. adequacy,but deviations from that standardare not 13 I here borrow the title of Esping-Andersen's understoodas having genderimplications.Analysts (1985) book. see inequalitiesin benefits solely in class terms. GENDERAND SOCIALRIGHTS 309 reference to gender inequalities in his discus- pate as "independentindividuals"- citizens sion of social rights (1990, pp. 21-23). - in the polity, which in turn affect their ca- Feminist analyses of citizenship highlighted pacitiesto demandandutilize social rights.The sexuality, reproduction,and physical bodies: ways that states intervene - or refuse to- "Citizenshipis defined as a practiceof embod- are critical to women's situation. ied subjects whose sex/gendered identity af- Political rights are also a problem for fects fundamentallytheirmembershipandpar- women. Women'sgender was once considered ticipation in public life" (Jones 1990, p. 786). reason enough for exclusion from the suf- Women face gender-specific threats to their frage.16After the vote was won, the extent to bodily integrity both inside and outside the which actual equality of rights was achieved family.As Shaver (1990) argued,"rightsin the has varied.However, this variationhas not en- control of one's body and sexual person, as in tered the analytic frameworksof mainstream marriage, consent to sexual activity, and the researchers.In all forms of formalpolitical ac- control of fertility and reproduction"have a tivity save voting, women participateat a lesser taken-for-grantedcharacter for men, but are ratethanmen (Randall1987; Nelson 1984); for contested issues for women. Feminist theory power resourcesanalysts such participationis, points to the subjugationof women in the pri- of course, the basis for enrichingsocial citizen- vate sphere of the family, which accordingto ship in the first place. liberal theory ought to be (and in practiceusu- A complete analysisof states'effects on gen- ally has been) free from state interference der relations should not rest with "social (Pateman 1988a, 1988b, 1989; Eisenstein rights"as they are defined by mainstreamre- 1981).15 For example, because of the inviolate searchers. Rather, analyses of social rights nature of "family privacy" in Western coun- should include an examination of family law tries, husbandshave been allowed to rape and and the legal frameworksand social programs batter their wives. Only recently have there dealing with legal personhoodand the control been some tentative legal reforms limiting of one's bodily capacities and functions. Fur- these "rights"and endowing women with the thermore,the analysis must examine issues of right to be free from such attacks(Breines and political rights and participation (Hernes Gordon 1983; Yllo and Bograd 1988; Pateman 1988). An accuratepicture of the content and 1988a, pp. 238-39; MacKinnon1989, chap. 9; effects of state social provision should not be- Smart 1989, p. 32; Russell 1982; Hanmer, gin from the premise of a gender-neutralciti- Radford,and Stanko 1989). The "femalefear" zenship. Rather,one must take account of the of rape also curtails women's access to public very real gender differences in productiveand spaces, sexual harassmentis an importantcom- reproductivelabor and access to civil and po- ponent of men's power in the workplace, and litical rights and how these differences influ- the state also threatensreproductivefreedoms ence the ways in which men and women (Connell 1987; MacKinnon 1989; Cockburn struggle for and claim benefits from the state 1991; Petchesky 1984). In sum, relations of as citizens. dominationbased on control of women's bod- ies in the family, the workplace, and public THE DIMENSIONSOF THE WELFARE spaces underminewomen's abilities to partici- STATE 15 Indeed, gendered analyses point out the illib- Esping-Andersen(1990) and Korpi(1989) pro- eral aspects of capitalist and democratic societies pose three dimensions that characterize the which are usually also considered liberal. (Some content of the welfare state: the relationship analyses investigating race and ethnicity, such as critical race theory, make similarobservations[see, e.g., Crenshaw 1989; Williams 1991; Matsuda 16 Skocpol (1992) described women's unusual 1989]). "Feminists have pointed to the contradic- political capacities in the Progressive Era in the tion between the rules of the public sphere built on United States. Despite being denied the franchise, consent and voluntaryassociations, and the rules of women waged successful campaigns in most states the private sphere built on oppression and natural for mothers' pensions and other legislation. This subjugation,and they have arguedthat this division episode underlines the difficulties of applying prevents women from realizing a full democratic Marshall'sevolutionaryanalysis of citizen rights to citizenship" (Siim 1988, p. 163). women. 310 AMERICANSOCIOLOGICALREVIEW between the state and the marketin providing thus shifts from buying power on the market welfare, the effects of the welfare state on so- towardpolitically based considerationsof jus- cial stratification, and the characterof social tice" (p. 313). Thus, there will be class-influ- rights (which in Esping-Andersen's scheme enced debates over the content of social policy includes how these affect the decom- and over the relative roles of marketsand poli- modification of labor). Clustering of systems tics in determiningwelfare outcomes. along these three dimensions defines regime States in a given regime-typeact similarly in types. Esping-Andersenand Korpi(1987) built regardto the market.In countrieswith a liberal on the work of analysts, such as Titmuss social policy regime, the market,ratherthanthe (1958), who distinguished between "residual" state, guaranteesmost welfare needs of most and "institutional" welfare states (see also citizens. For instance, in Canada,Britain, and Baldwin 1990). "Residual"welfare states only the United States public pension benefits make react to market or family "failures"and limit up a smaller proportionof the incomes of the assistance to marginal or especially "deserv- elderly than they do in Scandinaviancountries ing" social groups; "institutional" welfare or in Europe(Myles 1989, pp. 123-24). More- states are pro-active and are committed to the over, liberal states tend to respond to societal welfare needs of all strata of the population. "failures"ratherthaninterveneto preventprob- Esping-Andersen (1990) constructed a typol- lems from occurring.Thus, programsin liberal ogy of regimes representing"three worlds of regimes avoid undercuttingthe market by of- welfare capitalism" - liberal, conservative- fering only stigmatizing subsistence-level corporatistand social-democratic- by char- grantsto those unableto participatein the mar- acterizingsystems of social provisionalong the ket. In contrast,social-democraticand conser- threedimensions. Liberalregimes roughlycor- vative regimes arepro-activeandretaina larger respond to the "residual"states, while social- range of welfare activities, effectively crowd- democratic and conservative-corporatist re- ing out the market.For example, in both these gimes may be distinguished within the group types of regimes, privatepension schemes for of "institutional"states. Social-democraticre- better-offworkershave been forestalledby the gimes are universalistic and egalitarian,while expansion and elaborationof state programsto the conservative-corporatistregimes preserve cover all strataof the population(Palme 1990; status and class differentials.Despite the fact Esping-Andersen1990, chap. 4). that "there is no single pure case," Esping- Andersenclassified the United States, Canada, The StratificationDimension Australia, and (probably)GreatBritain as lib- eral regimes; the Nordic countries are identi- A second dimensionof policy regimes is strati- fied as social-democraticregimes; andAustria, fication: "The welfare state... is, in its own France, Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands right, a system of stratification.It is an active are conservative-corporatistregimes. force in the ordering of social relations" (Esping-Andersen1990, p. 23; Esping-Ander- The State-MarketRelations Dimension sen and Korpi 1987, p. 40). Thus, against the common view that "welfare states" promote A fundamental dimension that varies across greater equality, power resources analysts ar- welfare states concerns the "range,or domain, gue thatsystems of social provision have strati- of human needs that are satisfied by social fying effects: Some policies may promote policy" instead of by the market (Esping- equality, cross-class solidarity, or minimize Andersenand Korpi 1987, p. 41), thatis, "how economic differences, while others may pro- state activities are interlocked with the mote social dualism or maintainor strengthen market'sand the family's role in social provi- class, status, or occupational differentiation sion" (Esping-Andersen 1990, p. 21). Korpi (Esping-Andersen 1985, 1990). Social-demo- (1989) contendedthat as public provisions are craticregimes foster solidarityby including all put in place, this "decreasesthe scope of mar- citizens in common programs,and they reduce kets and changes the basis of distributionin class differences through income redistribu- these areas from marketpower to political re- tion. Conservative-corporatist regimes rein- sources. In the areas involved in the equal sta- force statusand occupationaldifferentiationby tus of citizenship, the criteria for distribution offering separateprovision for differentsocial GENDERAND SOCIALRIGHTS 311 strata,such as distinctprogramsfor blue-collar duction outside the labor contract meant that and white-collar workers.Liberal regimes en- people were commodified. In turn, the introduc- courage social dualisms between the desperate tion of modernsocial rightsimplies a loosening of minority,that relies on limited forms of social pure commodity status. De-commodification oc- curs when a service is rendered as a matter of assistance, and the majority,that relies princi- right,andwhen a personcan maintaina livelihood pally on the market for welfare (e.g., private without reliance on the market.(pp. 21-22) pensions and health plans). These regimes do not greatlymodify market-generatedstratifica- For Esping-Andersen (1990), decommodifi- tion or social mobility - any reductionsof so- cation is the heart of the welfare state's cial inequalitiesoccur over the life-span rather emancipatory potential: than across classes. As commodities, people are captive to powers The three types of regimes (social-demo- beyond their control... o If workers actually do cratic, conservative-corporatist, and liberal) behave as discretecommodities,they will by defi- also institutionalize distinctive patterns of nition compete; and the fiercer the competition, policy intereststhat help to shape the political the cheaper the price. As commodities, workers alliances and enmities that affect subsequent are replaceable,easily redundant,and atomized. political struggles over policy (Esping-Ander- De-commodificiation is..., as Polanyi argued, sen 1985;Baldwin 1990). Powerresourcesana- necessary for system survival. It is also a precon- lysts have focused almost exclusively on the dition for a tolerable level of individual welfare and security. Finally, without de-commodifica- ways in which policies affect class coalitions. tion, workersare incapableof collective action;it Others highlighted the ways in which specific is, accordingly,the alpha and omega of the unity features of social provisions "feed back" into and solidarity required for labor-movement de- politics by encouragingcertainalliances while velopment. (p. 37) discouragingothers, defining the terms of de- bate and developing certain state capacities Esping-Andersen argued that the extent to (Weir,Orloff, and Skocpol 1988; Stryker1990; which the rights embodied in social programs Heclo 1974; Jenson 1986, 1991). promote or circumscribe decommodification of labor is a critical dimension that varies across welfare states. The most decommodifying sys- The Social CitizenshipRights! tems offer many generous benefits simply on DecommodificationDimension the basis of citizenship, whereas the least The third dimension of the welfare state con- decommodifying have a relatively circum- cerns the characterof the social rights of citi- scribed range of social rights and most assis- zenship. Some benefits are universal, that is, tance is means-tested, which severely limits the they are available to all citizens or to all citi- emancipatory potential of benefits. Social- zens of a certain age or condition (e.g., sick- democratic regimes are the most decommodi- ness, unemployment,parenthood);some ben- fying since provision is generous, many ben- efits dependon labor marketparticipationand efits are universal, and access is relatively easy financial contribution;and some benefits are for workers. Liberal regimes limit decommod- income-tested,thatis, they areavailableonly to ification of labor by conditioning limited ben- those with incomes and assets below a certain efits on means tests or contributions based on level. These distinctionsregulateaccess to ben- work. Conservative-corporatist regimes, which efits, andalong with benefitlevels andthe range have strong citizenship rights to social benefits, of entitlements,they determinethe "degreeto do not promote decommodification of labor, which the individual's typical life situation is because the conditions for benefits reinforce freed from dependence on the labor market" reliance on work and the market - typically (Esping-Andersenand Korpi 1987, p. 40). benefits are linked to contributions. Esping-Andersen(1990) linked social rights to what he termed the decommodificationof GENDERING THE DIMENSIONS OF labor: WELFARE STATES It is as marketsbecomeuniversalandhegemonic thatthe welfareof individualscomesto depend The three dimensions proposed by Esping- entirelyonthecashnexus.Stripping societyof the Andersen and Korpi (1987; see also Korpi institutionallayersthatguaranteedsocialrepro- 1989; Esping-Andersen 1990) have given ana- 312 AMERICANSOCIOLOGICALREVIEW lytic coherence to diverse comparativestudies the aged (Esping-Andersen1990, P. 28). So- and have revealed distinctive clusters of coun- cial-democraticregimes also encouragemoth- tries based on theirsystems of social provision. ers to work in the paid work force by providing Yet, the dimensions are clearly flawed because day care and parentalleaves. of their inattentionto gender. AlthoughEsping-Andersenis rightto recog- nize the effects of services on women's abili- ties to enterthe paid labor force, his classifica- Genderingthe State-Market-FamilyRelations tion scheme does not reflect differencesin how Dimension careis provided.While liberalregimes, like the Power resourcesanalysts generallyhave given United States and Britain, lag in government more attention to the "division of labor" be- provision of welfare services, like child care or tween states and marketsin providingwelfare elder care, and allow the market to provide than to relations among states, markets, and them, the social-democraticSwedish state of- families. Indeed, the distinction between pub- fers extensive services (Ruggie 1984; lic and privateis seen as a distinctionbetween Bergmann1986). Yet among social-democratic politics and the market- families are ignored states, services are not the same: Women in as "private"providers of welfare goods and Sweden are likely to work outside the home, services (Esping-Andersenand Korpi 1987, p.. whereasNorway's day-careprovision is much 41). Provision of welfare "counts"only when less developed than Sweden's and relatively it occurs throughthe state or the market,while more Norwegian mothers stay at home (Leira women's unpaid work in the home is ignored. 1992). Within the conservative-corporatist Furthermore, the sexual division of labor group,Franceprovidesmanyservices for work- within states, markets, and families also goes ing mothers while Germanypromotes house- unnoticed. This dimension should be recon- wifery by offering few services. In the Nether- structedbased on the recognitionof the impor- lands, despite a strong social-democraticpres- tance of families and women's unpaidwork to ence that has helped to establish extensive so- the provision of social welfare, in addition to cial rights for wage earners(Esping-Andersen considering gendered patternsof work. State 1990, pp. 52-53), families have access to few provision that helps to shift the burdenof wel- services, and women have high rates of house- fare from the family to the state, or from wifery and economic dependence(Knijn 1991; women to men within the family furthers Jenson 1991; Hobson 1990, 1991a; Kamerman women's gender interests. and Kahn 1981; Lewis 1992). Recently,Esping-Andersen(1990) has noted Esping-Andersen'sregime types do not fully some importantdifferences across regimes in predictwomen's employmentpatterns.Esping- relations between states and families, that is, Andersen (1990, chaps. 6, 8) analyzed these "how state activities are interlocked with the patternsin Sweden, Germany,and the United market'sand the family's role in social provi- States (as "representatives" of the threeregime sion" (p. 21). He focused on services that re- types). Provisionof services is importantto the spond to "family needs... [and] also allow Swedish welfare state, and this "provides a women to choose work ratherthan the house- phenomenal multiplier-effect for female em- hold"(p. 28). Conservative-corporatist regimes ployment: Social services both allow women respectthe principleof subsidiarity- the "state to work, and createa largelabor-marketwithin will only interferewhen the family's capacity which they can find employment" (Esping- to service its members is exhausted"(Esping- Andersen 1990, p. 159). The lack of services Andersen 1990, p. 27), but will not provideser- in Germanyhas retardedthe growth of female vices that enable mothers (or other primary employment,whereaswomen's employmentin caretakers)to enter the paid labor force. Thus, the United States has increasedsharply,driven these regimes reinforcetraditionalfamily rela- by marketforces, in spite of the dearthof pub- tions. In liberal regimes, "concernsof gender lic services.Yet otheraspectsof women's work matter less than the sanctity of the market" (e.g., sex segregationof occupations and part- (Esping-Andersen1990, p. 28), whereassocial- time versus full-time work) are not accurately democratic regimes attempt to "preemptively predicted by the regime types (O'Connor socialize the costs of familyhood,"for example, 1992). In Germany(a conservative-corporatist by assuming partialresponsibility for care of state) and Sweden (a social-democraticstate), GENDERAND SOCIALRIGHTS 313 women are heavily concentratedin part-time sion of state-marketrelationsas formulatedby employment. Of the three countries, Sweden Esping-Andersensimply ignores the tremen- has the highest level of sex segregationin oc- dous amount of caring labor and housework cupations,and althoughGermanyhas a some- provided by women - housewives and wage what lower level of segregation, many fewer earnersalike. Feminist researchon the "labor women work outside the home in the first of caring"shows thatin all industrializedWest- place. In Sweden, occupational upgrading ern countries, welfare- tending to children, among women was accompaniedby continued the elderly, the sick and disabled - is largely segregation, while sex desegregationof occu- provided in private households by women pations is strongest in the United States and withoutpay, ratherthanby states, marketsand weakest in Germany (Esping-Andersen1990, voluntarynonprofitorganizations;all Western p. 210). Thus, while the conservative-corporat- welfare states depend upon this care to a great ist regime of Germany would be expected to extent (Finch and Groves 1983; Land 1983; preserve traditionaleconomic dependence for Land and Rose 1985; Waerness 1984; Taylor- women, the decline in the sex segregation of Gooby 1991, p.101). occupationsin the liberalregime of the United The sexual division of labor in caretaking States is unexpected. Nor would progressive and domestic work within institutions other Sweden be expected to have high levels of sex than the family must also be considered. In- segregation of occupations,part-timeemploy- deed, women carryout a disproportionateshare ment and women doing the bulk of unpaiddo- of welfare work, whetherit is provided by the mestic work. (Working wives in Sweden do state,privateorganizations,corporations,or the about72 percentof houseworkcomparedto 74 family. To the extent that this work is under- percent in the United States [Wright, Shire, valued in terms of benefits and political re- Hwang, Dolan, and Baxter 1992, p. 262; spect, women suffer disproportionately. Ruggie 1988; Lewis 1992; Baxter 1993]). Power resources analysts recognize that the These analytic inadequacies are related to "divisionof labor"between states and markets some of Esping-Andersen's premises, which in providingwelfareis a political question,that neglect gender relations and feminist scholar- is, it is a question of which decision rules ap- ship. He sees women as choosing between ply and which actorscontrolthe distributionof "workand the household,"with work possible valued resources.Clearly,the division of labor for most women only if state services are between marketsand polities is based on rela- widely available. Yet women in Scandinavia tions of power. There is no similarrecognition and elsewhere do not choose between paid of the division of labor between families and work and unpaidhousewifery(includingmoth- states in providingdomestic and caretakingla- ering) as exclusive activities (Hobson 1991a) bor, welfare services, and goods. Power re- - they can choose to be stay-at-homewives sources analysts simply do not discuss power and mothers only or combine paid work with relations within the family. For example, they their domestic work. Nowhere in the industri- ignore the fact thatthe distributionsof income, alized West can marriedwomen and mothers resources,and work within the family are con- choose not to engage in caring and domestic ditioned on power as well as benevolence and labor (unless they are wealthy enough to pur- shared interests (Hobson 1990; Pahl 1983, chase the services of others). Land and Rose 1988; Land 1983; England and Kilbourne (1985, p. 93) call this situation "compulsory 1990; Acker 1988).17To the extent that any as- altruism"for women (Taylor-Gooby1991, p. pect of men's power within the family is ac- 102). The core aspects of the sexual division knowledged, it is that based on women's eco- of labor remain:Womenperformmost domes- nomic dependence (e.g., Esping-Andersen tic work whether or not they work for pay, 1990, p. 28). However,it is not namedas men's while men do very little domestic work. power, nor is it relatedto other sources of gen- Understandinggenderrelations,particularly the sexual division of labor, helps explain 17 I should note that I am hardlythe first to point women's employment patterns.Many women out that liberal or leftist men, even those with good work part-timebecause this arrangement"al- intentions, seem to wear conceptual blinders when lows" them to do their domestic work the issue is men's and women's unequal power in (Beechey and Perkins 1987). Thus, the dimen- the family (e.g., see the essays in Sargent 1981). 314 AMERICANSOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW der power, such as sex segregationof occupa- cies reduce the sexual division of labor by tions, the division of householdwork, or men's shifting the burdenof domestic work to public control of women's bodies. services and to men. Of course, whether it is Men as a gender have power - a power re- men or public servants(especially if the public source, to use the terminology of Korpi and servants are women) who take on the private Esping-Andersen- flowing from theircontrol and unpaid caring and domestic burdens of of women's domestic and caring labor and of housewives and caretakersalso affects gender their bodies. Of course, women are not power- relationsand the shapeof distinctivegenderre- less in families, any more than workers are gimes. powerless on the job because capitalistshave greatermarketresources.But the power imbal- Genderingthe StratificationDimension ance between the gendersin families is impor- tant politically. Because of the power relations Power resources analysts have focused on the in families, shifting decision-makingaboutthe effects of state social provision on class hierar- distribution of resources or the provision of chies, but have ignored its effects on gender services from families to polities is parallelto hierarchies.Their existing scheme could cap- shifting decision-making from markets to ture gender differences in benefit levels that states, for it is a shift from an arenain which depend on labor market processes. Women's resources are disproportionatelycontrolledby inferior status in the work force means that men to one in which power may be more women are disproportionatelydisadvantaged equally distributedbetween men and women. when benefitsreflect work-relatedinequality.20 Althoughthe (electoral)numbersare not as de- To date, however, researchershave not done cisively favorable to women as they are to even this minimal gender-sensitive analysis wage earners,polities' decision rules and guid- (but see Quadagno 1988; Pearce 1978, 1983, ing ideologies are more likely to equalize out- 1986). They have not addressedtwo significant comes than to leave these decisions to indi- ways thatstatesreinforcethe genderhierarchy: viduals within families.18The failureto recog- (1) privileging full-time paid workers over nize gender relations and power within the workerswho do unpaidwork or who combine family and outside the family blinds the power part-timepaid work with domestic and caring resources analysts to aspects of social policy labor, and (2) reinforcing the sexual division regimes that affect genderrelations. of laborin which women do the bulk of unpaid The conceptualizationof a "division of la- work. bor" among states and markets must also in- In most systems of social provision, men's clude families as significant providersof wel- claims are based on paid work,while far fewer fare, and the unpaidcaring and domestic work women make such claims. Contributionsfrom of women must be explicitly recognized.19The wages to social insurancefunds bring entitle- state is woman-friendlyto the extent thatpoli- ment to benefits, and even in the case of needs- 18 Of course, one should not assume that all 20 Using the Korpi-Esping-Andersendata set, an women will "vote feminist" anymore than one analystcould comparethe minimumpensions avail- should assume socialist affiliations for workers. able to people lacking labor market experience to However, large numbersmay be a necessary condi- pensions available to people with lifetime labor tion for the enactmentof welfare policies favorable marketparticipation(personalcommunicationwith to disadvantagedgroups. Walter Korpi; see also Palme 1990, pp. 33-34). 19Researchersoutside the power resourceschool Housewives and women who have been secondary have highlighted the importanceof the "public-pri- earnerspredominateamong personsreceiving mini- vate split" (in a nonfeminist sense), that is, the "di- mum pensions, while male workers predominate vision of labor"between state and voluntaryor cor- among those receiving the highest pensions porate organizations in providing welfare (Katz (Burkhauserand Holden 1983; Quadagno 1988a; 1983, 1986; Flora and Alber 1981; Flora and Hei- Roos 1985; Matthei 1982; Bradley 1989). Although denheimer 1981). Voluntary or private social wel- the proximatecause of these unequalbenefits is dif- fare bodies have always been importantproviders ferent patterns of labor force participation, these of welfare services and assistance. Historically and work patternsin turndepend on relationsof depen- currently,women have predominatedamong char- dency and power in the breadwinner-housewife ity and volunteer workers (Michel and Koven household and men's power within the workplace, 1990). the polity, and public spaces. GENDERAND SOCIALRIGHTS 315 based or universal entitlements,men's claims Although this "two-tier" formulation cap- are usually made because of loss of paid em- tures some of the ways that careworkers are ployment. In contrast,most women's claims in undervalued,it is misleading in some respects. most Westernwelfare statesarebasedonfamil- It focuses only on the direct claims made by ial or marital roles (i.e., on the basis of unpaid men and women - male workers' contribu- domestic and caring work) although the pro- tions entitle them to social insurancebenefits, portion has been declining in the last few de- while needy mothers claim benefits based on cades (Fraser1989; Gordon1990;Nelson 1984, an income test and their family/maritalstatus. 1990). (Of course, all such claims do not re- In fact, although women are overrepresented ceive equal treatment, as factors like race, among the clients of social assistanceschemes, ethnicity,or maritalstatusalso have effects.) In they are a majority of clients in most social all systems of social provision,claims basedon welfare programs,including the old-age pro- motherhood or marriage to a covered wage gramsof Social Security(unemploymentinsur- earner,which often have more stringenteligi- ance is one prominent exception). Indeed, bility requirements,are associated with lower many more women are indirectlyincorporated benefit levels than are direct, work-based in the welfare state on the basis of their hus- claims. bands' contributions than claim benefits as A number of American scholars have needy carers. Unlike women who receive so- mapped the differences in treatmentbetween cial assistance, wives or widows with or with- caring/unpaidlaborand paid laboronto the du- out children who receive social security are alistic structureof the U.S. welfare state. They treatedas "rights-bearers" ratherthanas clients have identified a "two-tier"system in which - their marital tie to a covered breadwinner social assistance programs serve a predomi- entitles them to the same standardizedtreat- nantly female clientele, while contributoryso- ment and nationally-determined,inflation-in- cial insurancetargetsa predominantlymale cli- dexed benefits accorded to men who receive entele (Pearce 1978, 1983, 1986; Nelson 1984, social security.These women arethus betteroff 1990; Acker 1988; Fraser 1989).21 Stark in- than women who depend on welfare, but they equalities exist between the two types of pro- are also worse off relative to men within the grams. Social assistance programs,on which same program because dependents' benefits many single mothers rely for income protec- are only 50 percent of the main beneficiary's tion (e.g., "welfare" or Aid to Families with entitlement (although a survivor gets the full DependentChildren)are politically less legiti- amountafterthe deathof the main beneficiary) mate, less generously funded, and more ori- (Burkhauserand Holden 1983).23 ented to monitoring clients' behavior and in- In the United States, the difference between come than are social insuranceprograms(e.g., the two tiers of social insuranceand social as- "social security,"or Old Age, Survivors' and sistance - often understoodas the difference Disability Insurance) on which most unem- in treatmentbetween men and women - is ployed and retiredwage-earningmen rely.22 better conceptualizedas a difference between membersof families that are, or were, headed 211I am not sure where the "two-tier"formulation by a male breadwinnerwith an economically originated, but countless authorsnow repeat that it dependent wife (and children), and families indeed exists. Nelson (1984, pp. 221-23) provided maintainedby women who are not in the paid an early and often-cited discussion of this concept, in which she recognizes the gender differences in labor force, or work on its fringes, who must the clienteles of social assistance versus social in- make claims based on their status as mothers. surance programs in the United States, as well as the distinction between the types of claims made Families with Dependent Children. Also, childless within these differenttiers. While Nelson is careful women are also ineligible for AFDC. not to conflate the two, many of those who cite her 23 Access to indirectclaims differs for women in work have been less careful. different classes and racial and ethnic groups: A 22 American men who do not qualify for social woman must be marriedto a man in covered em- insurance programs - disproportionately ethnic ploymentto receive dependents'benefits. However, and racial minorities - must rely on social assis- men who are blue-collarworkersor membersof ra- tance programs(usually called general assistance), cial or ethnic minorities are more likely to be un- which are not available nationwide, receive no fed- employed, which then affects the women who de- eral funding, and are less generous than Aid to pend on them for financial support. 316 AMERICANSOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW This complicates the argumentthat two-tiered dined because the universalflat-ratepensions systems generate distinctive interests for all have been supersededby earnings-relatedpen- women - some women are tied to the welfare sions (Esping-Andersenand Korpi 1987, pp. state as mothers, while others are tied to the 50-53; Kangasand Palme 1992). Although the stateas wives (althoughdivorce- or the threat povertyratein Sweden is much lower thanthat of it - may weaken that bond for some in the United States, women and men outside women). This distinctioncan be significantpo- the paid labor force in both countries fare litically because it reinforces differences be- worse than those who have or had a secure at- tween two-parent families and single-parent tachment to it (McLanahan, Casper, and families, as has occurredin the United States Sorenson 1992). Indeed,Hernes(1988) argued (Weir,Orloff, and Skocpol 1988). Althoughthe that "there is the underlying assumption [in "two-tiered"formulationhas sometimes been Sweden and throughoutEurope],almost never generalized to other nation's systems of social expressed openly, that universal welfare state provision, this is problematic. For example, services and transfersmust not exceed those most of Australia'ssocial programsare means- earned in the labour market.... There is a po- tested, while the Nordic countriesrely on uni- litical struggle between men and women to versal programssupplementedby contributory count also certain types of unpaid work as a insurance(Shaver 1983; Hernes 1987). legitimatebasis for welfare rights"(p. 194). Social insurance programs may not treat States perpetuatethe gender division of la- men's and women's work-based claims bor in a variety of ways; for instance, gaining equally,either.Gainingeligibility for social in- entitlementto social assistance sometimes re- surance programs is often more difficult for quires women to demonstrate homemaking working women thanfor workingmen. For ex- skills (Abromovitz 1988; Pascall 1986; Fraser ample, until recently,marriedwomen had to be 1989). Both the U.S. and British social secu- unable to performhouseworkand paid work to rity systems offer greater benefits to "house- claim work-related disability benefits under wife-maintainingfamilies"(usuallyby offering Britain's social insurance system (Pateman dependents' or survivors' benefits under the 1988a, pp. 247-50; Pascall 1986). Under U.S. old age program)than to single individuals or unemploymentinsuranceprograms,claimants dual-earnercouples (in which the woman can may be declared ineligible because they are receive her own work-relatedbenefits or the unable to work at any time or place because of dependent'sbenefits, but not both) (Bergmann child care responsibilities or spouses' work 1986, p. 258; McIntosh 1978; Pascall 1986; commitments(Pearce 1986). Acker 1988). Other public mechanisms In a few welfare states - primarilyin the from tax systems to the absence of services to Nordic countries - men and women receive alleviate domestic responsibilities - also benefits solely on the basis of citizenship.This maintaintraditionaldivisions of labor. arrangementis most common in health insur- Given the differential treatment accorded ance or medical care and flat-rateold-age pen- unpaidcaring and domestic labor comparedto sions. Thus, many analysts consider benefits paid labor and the ways in which programre- based on universalcitizenshipto be most likely quirementsreinforcethe sexual division of la- to further gender equality. Although citizen- bor in householdsand the workplace,analyses ship-basedbenefits may be more conducive to of states' effects on stratification should in- equalitythan work- or need-basedbenefits, the clude genderrelations.The concept of stratifi- range of needs covered by such benefits often cation - if amendedto account for these fac- betrays a gender bias. For example, benefits tors - remains a useful one. claimed on the basis of paid workreceive fund- Gendereffects are also apparentin the ways ing priority while the public services that in which systems of social provision affect so- women depend on are not funded sufficiently cial politics (i.e., "politicalfeedback").Power to serve all those eligible (Hobson 1990, p. resources analysts have noted the dualism of 247; Ruggie 1984, chap. 6). liberalregimes:Benefits and services are mea- The Scandinavianstates also tend to privi- ger and availableonly to the poorest individu- lege those claiming benefits based on labor als, forcingothersto turnto the marketfor ben- marketparticipation.Since the 1960s, entitle- efits and services. In liberal regimes, women ments based solely on citizenship have de- make up a disproportionateshareof those with- GENDERAND SOCIALRIGHTS 317 out access to market-basedwelfare benefits, providesworkerswith income from outside the and thus aremore dependenton public benefits market,therebystrengtheningtheir leverage in and services than are men (Shaver 1983; Piven the market.Decommodification,which is tied 1985; U.S. House of RepresentativesCommit- to the political power inherent in citizenship, tee on Ways and Means 1988, pp. 34-35; Tay- influences the political fortunes of working- lor-Gooby 1991; Nelson 1984). Thus, dualism class movements, and hence, the possibilities promotedby the welfare state has a genderdi- for social and political transformation.By ig- mension as well as a class dimension.As a re- noring gender differences in the situations of sult, some analystshave arguedthatwomen are men andwomen workers,particularlywith ref- more likely than men to give political support erence to domestic and caringlabor,and in ac- to public social provision. cess to the paid laborforce, Esping-Andersen's Social-democratic regimes are alleged to concept is inadequatefor understandingthe ef- producea universalistsocial politics. However, fects of state social provision on all workers. an analysis of four Nordic welfare states found Decommodification,as a dimension of policy differences between men's and women's links regimes, must be understoodin the context of to and attitudestowardthe state (Hernes 1987, gender relations and also must be supple- 1988). Men are politicized by their participa- mented by a new analytic dimension: the ex- tion in the labormarket,thatis, they are linked tent to which states guaranteewomen access to the state by theirparticipationin corporatistto paid employment and services that enable organizations- employers' associations and them to balance home and work responsibili- labor unions - that bargaindirectly with the ties, and the mechanisms and institutionsthat state over social benefits.Althoughwomen are implementthese guarantees. often workers, they are usually under- Power resources analysts implicitly begin represented in corporatist decision-making with the situationof male workers and ignore bodies. More important,women's statusas cli- the genderdivision of laborthatmakes the situ- ents and employees of the welfare state politi- ations of men and women in the paid work cizes and mobilizes them. In Scandinavia, force different.Benefits that decommodify la- these gendered patterns of state-citizen rela- bor give male workers greatercapacity to re- tionshipshave genderedthe debateover public sist capital and enter the marketon their own versus private provision of welfare such that terms, but unpaid services provided by wives, women are strongersupportersof state welfare mothers,daughtersalso enhancemale workers' benefits and services. capacities.Thus, to focus only on decommodi- Systems of social protectionproducegender fication is misleading about male workers' differencesas well as class differencesin inter-situation. What of women workers? Again, ests and coalitions. Indeed, comparisonsof the power resourcesanalysis startsfrom an implic- relative salience of gender, class, and other itly male premise:Women have "chosen"be- bases of identity and mobilizationin different tween housewiferyandpaid work, so that once welfare states should be revealing (Michel and they enter the paid labor force, their domestic Koven 1990; Skocpol and Ritter 1991; Jenson responsibilities disappear from the analysis, 1991; Skocpol 1992). and they become indistinguishablefrom male workers.Social benefits that decommodify la- bor affect women and men in different ways Genderingthe Social CitizenshipRights/ because their patternsof participationin paid DecommodificationDimension and unpaid labor differ. For instance, taking In Esping-Andersen'sversion of the power re- parental leave, an example of a benefit that sources scheme, social rights that decom- decommodifies labor, may reduce a working modify labor are essential to realizing the po- woman's earningcapacity because continuous tentialof the welfare statefor emancipatingthe service with an employer often pays off in in- working class from the capitalist market and creased wages (Bergmann 1986, pp. 77-80; individual employers.24 Decommodification sen's analysis follows the traditionof reformist so- 24 Some class analystsare dissatisfiedwith the cial democracy in which significant alleviation of notionthatstatesocial provisionundercapitalism the problems flowing from capitalist relations is coulddecommodifylabor.Clearly,Esping-Ander- believed to be possible. 318 AMERICANSOCIOLOGICALREVIEW CorcoranandDuncan 1979). The implicitmale women's paid employment - the right to be standardfor "worker"obscurespowerrelations commodified, if you will. I call this fourth di- in the family and the conditions under which mension of welfare-state regimes access to social reproductiontakes place. Yet domestic paid work. In some countries, men's rights to work must be done and care providedfor chil- jobs are promoted through full employment dren, the elderly, and the disabled. The social and active labor marketpolicies. Thus, I con- organizationof domestic and caretakingwork tend that the extent to which the state ensures must be examined, as well as the extent to access to paid work for different groups and which access to services is a right of citizen- the mechanismsthat guaranteejobs (e.g., reli- ship or is conditionedon laborforce participa- ance on private employment, creation of tax tion, maritalor family status,or financialneed. incentives, legal regulationof privateemploy- ers, or public jobs programs) are dimensions of all policy regimes.26The key issue in inves- TWO NEW DIMENSIONSOF WELFARE tigatingstates'effects on genderrelationsis the STATES extent to which women (or subgroups of women) can claim this right. Of course, paid Access to Paid Work work exchanges one form of dependence How does an analysis based on the situationof familial - for another - the dependence on commodified male workers deal with women an employer for employment.Classical Marx- working in the home? For many women and ism arguedthat women had to be proletarian- others excluded from paid labor, commodifi- ized as a preludeto their emancipation,which cation - that is, obtaining a position in the would come to them in their statusas workers. paid labor force - is in fact potentially However, I am more concerned with the po- emancipatory.Contemporaryand historicalre- tential of paid work to provide women with search has found that many women want paid some autonomy vis-a-vis marriage(or depen- work because it provides independence and dence on parents). enhancedleverage within marriageand the pa- The historical development of decommodi- triarchal family (Blumstein and Schwartz fication indicates the importanceof access to 1983; England and Kilbourne1990; Benenson paid work and social benefits. Expanding so- 1991). Equal access to paid employment and cial rights was an historically-specificstrategy equal pay has been a consistent - and con- of some male-dominatedlabormovementsand tested - demandof women's movementsover their elite (male) allies, as most early social the past century(Hobson 1991b). In marriages programs - old-age pensions, workmen's (or other family relationships)in which power compensation, unemployment insurance, and relationsarebased largely on economic depen- healthinsurance- aimed at securingthe posi- dence, access to paid work and to the services tion of male workers as breadwinnerswhen that make employment a viable option for they were unable to supporttheir families due mothers(or othercaretakers)is as importantas to loss of jobs or wage-earning capacities - perhaps even more important than - the (Skocpol and Ritter 1991; Skocpol 1992; insulation from marketpressuresprovided by Orloff 1993, chaps. 5-9; Jenson 1986; Hernes decommodification.25 Thus, the decommodifi- 1988, pp. 198, 203). Although some labor cation dimensionmust be supplementedwith a movements have preferred a "voluntarist" new analytic dimension that taps into the ex- strategy to a strategy based on public provi- tent to which states promote or discourage sion, the broadly-sharedgoal of male-domi- natedcross-class alliances (at least throughthe 25 Wives' economic dependence "both reflects first half of the century) was to ensure that labor marketrealities and reinforceswomen's weak position in the labormarket"(Hobson 1990, p. 236; participationin paid labor, the marital balance of Sorenson and McLanahan1987). Economic depen- power, in turn, has implications for both spouses' dence is associated with less power within the fam- currentand future earning power, economic well- ily because decision-making in marriageis largely being, and entitlement to social benefits (Hobson based on spouses' contributionsto family income 1990; Quadagno1988a). (Blumstein and Schwartz1983; EnglandandFarkas 26 Esping-Andersen (1990, p. 22) did note the 1986; England and Kilbourne 1990). By affecting importanceof full employmentto social-democratic decisions about investment in "humancapital"and regimes. GENDERAND SOCIALRIGHTS 319 working-classmen couldfulfill the role offam- income with theirchildrenafterthe dissolution ily provider This was achieved by improving of marriage,and states do not make up the dif- male workers'marketposition, by supplement- ference fully (althoughthere is some cross-na- ing men's wages, and by providing honorable tional variationin this) (Garfinkeland McLan- public benefits when work was unavailable. ahan 1986; Kamerman 1986; Kahn and Ka- This policy strategywas linked with a "family merman 1988). Single mothers, who have wage" strategyin the marketand was premised lower earning capacities relative to men and on a traditionalgender division of labor, that more responsibility for their children's well- is, women were responsible for domestic and being, exemplify the economic vulnerabilities caring work (even if also engaged in paid la- of all women - vulnerabilitiesthat are hidden bor) and men were responsible for providing when women have a secure tie to breadwin- the bulk of the family income. ners. Indeed, the deprived circumstances of The dominant goal of post-World War II single mothersare sometimes an incentive for workers' movements has been to extend social women to marry(or to not divorce). Moreover, rights. Yet labor movements vary in the extent family income is not always sharedequally in to which they continue to defend the family marriages (Pahl 1983, 1988), and women's wage and male family headship. Some work- economic dependencyis a significant basis for ing-class movementshave changedin response men's power advantagein families. to the increasing numbers of women in their If decommodificationis importantbecause it constituencies and have supported anti-dis- frees wage earnersfrom the compulsionof par- criminationand comparableworth legislation ticipatingin the market,a paralleldimensionis and services such as day care (Ruggie 1984, needed to indicate the ability of those who do 1988; Jenson, Hagen, and Reddy 1988; Milk- most of the domestic and caring work - al- man 1990). Yet in few (if any) instances have most all women - to form and maintain au- such movementsembracedan explicit feminist tonomous households, that is, to survive and goal of economic independence for women. supporttheir childrenwithout having to marry Rather,their goal usually is to allow married to gain access to breadwinners'income. women to combine paid work with family re- I see two ways to conceptualizea dimension sponsibilities- to be secondaryearnerswhile of social provision that characterizesdegrees continuing to service their husbands (Hernes of family supportand the exigencies of marry- 1988; Lewis 1992). (Single women may fare ing. First,a generaldimension of self-determi- somewhat better.) nation could be developed that would include independence from markets and marriages. The Capacity to Form and Maintainan Second, proceeding inductively, a dimension based on the demandsof women's movements AutonomousHousehold could be developed,just as decommodification The concept of decommodificationoriginated developed from the aims of male-dominated in analyses of class relationsand class politics. workers' movements. (This inductive strategy New categories are needed to deal with the ef- is not innocentof theory,of course, but allows fects of state social provision on gender rela- the use of feminists' suggestions about what tions. If individuals who carry out caring and may be necessaryto emancipatewomen to fur- domestic work do not enter the labor market, therclarify the significance of the demandsfor or enter it only as secondary workers, the re- which social movements have struggled.)I ar- sulting distributionof income within the fam- gue that the appropriatedimension is the ca- ily and the availabilityof otherincome sources pacity to form and maintain an autonomous affects their own and their children'swell-be- householdd.7 ing. Over the last century or so, the "family 27 An importantaspect of social benefits as they wage" supplementedby social rights has pro- vided unevenly for wives and children.Femi- affect the capacity to form and maintainan autono- mous household is the extent to which they indi- nists often say that women are "a husband vidualizeor "familize"recipients(Fraser1989). For away from poverty";if you've got a husband example, the use of household means tests under- and he shareshis income with you, you're pro- mines women's abilities to claim benefits as indi- tected, but if not, you're likely to suffer eco- viduals. Australia's and Canada's means-tested as- nomically.Most men simply do not sharetheir sistance programsfor the unemployed and the sick 320 AMERICANSOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW The decommodificationdimension could be within webs of interdependencies (complete subsumed under a more generic dimension individual autonomy does not exist).28In the measuringindependenceor autonomy,that is, end, I preferthatseparatedimensionsdeal with it would indicate individuals' freedom from different social relations, but a single dimen- compulsionto enterinto potentiallyoppressive sion that explicitly considers gender as well as relationshipsin a numberof spheres. This di- class relations would, I think, be an improve- mension would reflect the growing individual- ment over the decommodification/socialrights ization flowing from processes of moderniza- dimension alone. tion and state-building,processes that have re- The problem can also also be dealt with in- placed the networks of mutual duties and re- ductivelyandhistoricallyby linkingthe dimen- sponsibilities - and hierarchies - of tradi- sions of the welfare state to social politics and tional corporate bodies with direct links be- historicalagency.A focus on women's agency tween citizens and states. States now offer re- in social politics would supplement decom- sources to the differentparties in relationships modificationwith a dimension that taps a goal of domination, accommodation, and conflict of women's movements - the capacity to (e.g., markets, families, and interracial rela- form and maintain an autonomoushousehold tions). These state-providedresourcesalterthe (which can be secured in a numberof ways). balance of power in these relationsand within Indeed,women's movementshave pursuedtwo the polity. Individuals typically participatein principalstrategiesto gain economic indepen- many such relationships.Thus, the role of the dence: (1) establishing secure incomes for state cannot be understoodin referenceto only women who engage in full-time domestic work one relationship- decommodificationvis-a- and caring for their children;and (2) improv- vis the market cannot ignore gender relations ing access to paid work and establishing ser- in the family or race relationsin communities. vices that reduce the burdenof caring on indi- The total package of resources available from vidual households (Pateman1988a). (This fur- both public and private sources across social ther supportsthe claim that access to paid em- locations must be considered.Attentionwould ployment should be considereda dimension of shift from dimensions tied to only one set of policy regimes.) These strategies have over- potentially unequal or oppressive relations to lappedhistorically,but the second has emerged an examinationof the combined effects of all as the more importantin the "secondwave" of programson individualsin specific politically feminism. Both strategies would provide and socially significantgroups. women with incomes sufficient to support This solution would meld the concepts of themselves and their children apart from any decommodificationand access to an indepen- claims on breadwinners' income. Indeed, if dent income (outside of marriage)into a uni- successful, these strategies would extend to tary concept of individual independence, or women rights that are implicitly or explicitly better yet, a concept of self-determination now guaranteedto men (of the dominantrace/ ethnic group), as in the Italiancase where, ac- are conditioned jointly on the incomes of both cordingto Saraceno(1992, p. 8), men have the spouses in the case of marriedcouples, which ef- right to a family -- that is, a man has the right fectively disqualifies the second earner,usually the to a job or income that allows him to maintain woman, from benefits when her income is inter- rupted (Shaver 1983, 1990; Bernier and LaJoie a wife and children. 1986, pp. 105-06). Women's claims to benefits are The focus on women's independentincome also undercutby the "cohabitationrule"(presentin for supportinga household and their choices many countries' social assistance programs),which about (at least potentially oppressive) mar- presumes that living or sleeping with a man indi- riages goes beyond the focus of the power re- cates that he is financially supportinghis partner. Whether a family allowance offers an independent 28 Esping-Andersen(1990) noted that"thesocial- income to mothers depends on which parent re- democratic regime's policy of emancipation ad- ceives the benefit - feminists had to fight for dresses both the market and the traditional fam- women's right to be designated beneficiaries ily... the ideal is... to maximize... capacities (Pascall 1986, p. 220). Regulations allowing for individual independence"(p. 28). However, he women independentaccess to benefits and services did not pursue the implications of independence are more woman-friendlythan those that force de- vis-a'-vis the traditionalfamily and how indepen- pendence on household qualification. dence might differ from decommodification. GENDERAND SOCIALRIGHTS 321 sources analysts on "socializing the costs of Ritter 1991; Pedersen 1989). They allowed familyhood" and "allowing women to choose women and their children to survive without work." The capacity to form and maintainan husbands, but in relatively deprived circum- autonomoushousehold relieves women of the stances. Nowhere did a maternalist strategy compulsion to enter or stay in a marriagebe- achieve parity between benefits for stay-at- cause of economic vulnerability(thus parallel- home mothersand wage earners'benefits or a ing the effects of the citizen's wage for work- standardof living for single mothers compa- ers vis-A-visthe market).Following Hirschman rable to their marriedcounterparts.Feminists (1970), the right of exit - in this case, to be and others still debate the extent to which a able to choose not to enter or stay in a mar- maternaliststrategy- paying women to stay riage - alters the power relationswithin mar- home with theirchildren- is a viable strategy, riages (Englandand Kilbourne1990). The state and this seems to vary cross-nationally. is woman-friendlyto the extentthatit enhances Increasing work opportunities and shiftin