Journal article 22849 views
`Habitus and Bureaucratic Routines', Cultural and Structural Factors in the Experience of Informal Care: A Qualitative Study of Bangladeshi Women Living in London
Current Sociology, Volume: 56, Issue: 1, Pages: 57 - 76
Swansea University Author: Nilufar Ahmed
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DOI (Published version): 10.1177/0011392107084379
Abstract
This article draws on Bourdieu's notion of habitus to address the interaction between cultural and structural factors in influencing the experience of informal care among Bangladeshi women in London. The authors present a secondary analysis of a qualitative study focusing on the accounts of inf...
Published in: | Current Sociology |
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2008
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa24926 |
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v2 24926 2015-11-27 `Habitus and Bureaucratic Routines', Cultural and Structural Factors in the Experience of Informal Care: A Qualitative Study of Bangladeshi Women Living in London d8d2587d94adcdf31706b9efe04db909 0000-0003-4274-801X Nilufar Ahmed Nilufar Ahmed true false 2015-11-27 HPP This article draws on Bourdieu's notion of habitus to address the interaction between cultural and structural factors in influencing the experience of informal care among Bangladeshi women in London. The authors present a secondary analysis of a qualitative study focusing on the accounts of informal care. The data were drawn from a two-year study with Bangladeshi women aged 35—55. Thirty-two out of the 100 women in the original study were providing care, mostly in isolated circumstances and with little or no formal support. The authors analysed the accounts of these 32 women and in the context of high levels of suffering and distress, three key themes emerged: amplification of suffering, dispositions of duty and religion and entitlements and fields of struggle. The gaps in access to formal support faced by these women suggest that strong cultural and structural forces determined their experience of informal care and the meanings they attached to their role as informal carers. Drawing on the work of Bourdieu and others, the authors suggest that where there is a lack of agency and resistance to support services, the explanation needs to move beyond poor information and language issues to a more rounded understanding of relationship between habitus and conflicts over local fields of welfare Journal Article Current Sociology 56 1 57 76 ethnicity, care, London, informal carers, Bangladeshi 31 12 2008 2008-12-31 10.1177/0011392107084379 COLLEGE NANME Public Health, Policy and Social Sciences COLLEGE CODE HPP Swansea University 2023-06-28T14:40:21.0685130 2015-11-27T16:46:02.3803818 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Health and Social Care - Public Health N. Ahmed 1 I. Rees Jones 2 Nilufar Ahmed 0000-0003-4274-801X 3 |
title |
`Habitus and Bureaucratic Routines', Cultural and Structural Factors in the Experience of Informal Care: A Qualitative Study of Bangladeshi Women Living in London |
spellingShingle |
`Habitus and Bureaucratic Routines', Cultural and Structural Factors in the Experience of Informal Care: A Qualitative Study of Bangladeshi Women Living in London Nilufar Ahmed |
title_short |
`Habitus and Bureaucratic Routines', Cultural and Structural Factors in the Experience of Informal Care: A Qualitative Study of Bangladeshi Women Living in London |
title_full |
`Habitus and Bureaucratic Routines', Cultural and Structural Factors in the Experience of Informal Care: A Qualitative Study of Bangladeshi Women Living in London |
title_fullStr |
`Habitus and Bureaucratic Routines', Cultural and Structural Factors in the Experience of Informal Care: A Qualitative Study of Bangladeshi Women Living in London |
title_full_unstemmed |
`Habitus and Bureaucratic Routines', Cultural and Structural Factors in the Experience of Informal Care: A Qualitative Study of Bangladeshi Women Living in London |
title_sort |
`Habitus and Bureaucratic Routines', Cultural and Structural Factors in the Experience of Informal Care: A Qualitative Study of Bangladeshi Women Living in London |
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d8d2587d94adcdf31706b9efe04db909 |
author_id_fullname_str_mv |
d8d2587d94adcdf31706b9efe04db909_***_Nilufar Ahmed |
author |
Nilufar Ahmed |
author2 |
N. Ahmed I. Rees Jones Nilufar Ahmed |
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Current Sociology |
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10.1177/0011392107084379 |
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School of Health and Social Care - Public Health{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Health and Social Care - Public Health |
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description |
This article draws on Bourdieu's notion of habitus to address the interaction between cultural and structural factors in influencing the experience of informal care among Bangladeshi women in London. The authors present a secondary analysis of a qualitative study focusing on the accounts of informal care. The data were drawn from a two-year study with Bangladeshi women aged 35—55. Thirty-two out of the 100 women in the original study were providing care, mostly in isolated circumstances and with little or no formal support. The authors analysed the accounts of these 32 women and in the context of high levels of suffering and distress, three key themes emerged: amplification of suffering, dispositions of duty and religion and entitlements and fields of struggle. The gaps in access to formal support faced by these women suggest that strong cultural and structural forces determined their experience of informal care and the meanings they attached to their role as informal carers. Drawing on the work of Bourdieu and others, the authors suggest that where there is a lack of agency and resistance to support services, the explanation needs to move beyond poor information and language issues to a more rounded understanding of relationship between habitus and conflicts over local fields of welfare |
published_date |
2008-12-31T14:40:17Z |
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1769953943709810688 |
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11.037603 |