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Planning and Organizing Alternatives Stemming from the Sphere of Reproduction

Rita Liljeström

Department of Sociology, University of Gothenburg

The paper reminds us of the historical starting point by describing the three dimensions of the household patriarchate After the workplace and the dwelling became segregated, they founded the core of two separate systems. The separation of paid work on the market from unpaid work in the home gradually changed the reproductive relations. The critical learning processes in production and reproduction convey different critical learning processes. The article proceeds to compare the experiences that are built into the way in which production is organized with the message that is transmitted through the unpaid reproductive work. The comparison indicates that the experiences clearly clash with one another point after point This thorough-going conflict raises the questions: what has steered the organization of reproduction? What do the tendencies outlined signify for alternative planning?

Acta Sociologica, Vol. 25, No. 1 suppl, 47-55 (1982)
DOI: 10.1177/000169938202500107x


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E. Dahlstrom and R. Liljestrom
The Patriarchal Heritage and the Working-Class Women
Acta Sociologica, January 1, 1983; 26(1): 3 - 20.
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