Leisure, family and work in the lifestyles of dual-earner familiesTools Such, Elizabeth (2001) Leisure, family and work in the lifestyles of dual-earner families. In: ESRC seminar: Impact of a Changing Labour Market on Families, Children and Mental Health: building research�user alliances, 7 November 2001, University of Aberdeen. (Unpublished) Full text not available from this repository.AbstractThis paper examines the role of leisure in the lifestyles of dual-earner families. It explores leisure as a dimension of lifestyle that has been relatively under-researched, despite a burgeoning interest in the dual-earner family in both academic research and policy and political contexts. Although it has been generally acknowledged that leisure is a vital component of daily life, much social scientific research has focussed on the relationship between family and employment in dual-earner families and analyses of leisure have been relatively incomplete (for example Hochschild, 1989; Scott and Duncombe, 1992; Gregson and Lowe, 1993, 1994). In a policy context, family-related policy discourse has highlighted the problems dual-earner families face trying to reconcile the demands of work and home and achieve a 'work-life balance', but explicit references to leisure are almost absent from debate. Scholars within the interdisciplinary field of leisure studies have, however, argued that a leisure dimension to research and analysis offers additional insight into daily life that can enhance existing academic and policy debate (for example Deem, 1999; Kay, 2000).
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