Narratives on Working Hours: An Analysis of “Pioneer” Brokering Agencies for Live-in Care Work in Germany Cover Image

Narratives on Working Hours: An Analysis of “Pioneer” Brokering Agencies for Live-in Care Work in Germany
Narratives on Working Hours: An Analysis of “Pioneer” Brokering Agencies for Live-in Care Work in Germany

Author(s): Simone Habel
Subject(s): Social Sciences, Labor relations, Health and medicine and law, Sociology of the arts, business, education, Welfare services, Migration Studies, Socio-Economic Research
Published by: Sociologický ústav - Slovenská akadémia vied
Keywords: Live-in care; home-based care; migrant care work; brokering agencies; working conditions; understanding of working hours; legitimation narratives;

Summary/Abstract: Narratives on Working Hours: An Analysis of “Pioneer” Brokering Agencies for Live-in Care Work in Germany. In the “gray market” for live-in care work in Germany, brokering agencies are playing an increasingly important role in shaping working conditions. Drawing on six expert interviews with “pioneer” brokering agencies, this article centers on these agencies’ narratives on working hours. The analysis reveals that these agencies’ understanding of working hours is contradictory: working hours are either referred to as a fixed, intersubjectively measurable category or as a subjective phenomenon, leaving scope for divergent opinions. These perspectives are evident in the assumption of an (in)separability of working and leisure time, and in the understanding of leisure time as a personal need or a valid demand. In this context, constructing working hours as a subjective category thus functions as a legitimation narrative for extensive working hours. These findings are connected to the contradictory interpellations of live-in care workers, such as “fictive kin” and “manager of the self”, and to the underlying understandings of work.

  • Issue Year: 53/2021
  • Issue No: 5
  • Page Range: 463-482
  • Page Count: 20
  • Language: English