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Linda McDowell
organisational cultures, occupational segregation and the future shape of and
spatial differentiation within service-dominated economies. And in this work, the
very fact that many more workers were women, that women often worked part-
time to allow for their continued responsibilities for their families, that they
might not want to or be able to travel long distances to work raised new ques-
tions that had seemed irrelevant in earlier studies. Thus, for example, in a fasci-
nating case-study of the connections between recruitment policies and locational
strategies, Kristen Nelson (1987) showed how high tech firms in the Bay Area
in California explicitly searched for and changed location in order to attract a
certain fraction of the female labour force; reliable but unambitious middle class
and middle aged women for clerical positions. Susan Hanson and Gerry Pratt
(1995) in their influential study of the labour market in Gloucester Mass looked
at the connections between occupational segregation, travel to work patterns and
household labours, Milkman (1987) showed how local labour market conditions
especially the demand for labour influenced the ways in which firms in postwar
America came to different decisions about the differential pay rates between men
and women. In the UK, Doreen Massey (1984) and McDowell and Massey
(1984) looked at regional divisions of labour and the connections with women’s
domestic responsibilities. Massey (1995) then developed these ideas in an explo-
ration of the connections between gendered roles and responsibilities in the
emerging employment practices of the hi-tech industries then expanding around
the university town of Cambridge and I looked at new gender divisions of labour
in the City of London as deregulation after 1988 led to high demand for labour
(McDowell 1997).
In all this work, what distinguished it from other studies of regional development
and labour market changes was explicit attention to the causes and consequences
of the gender division of labour in the workplace and in the home. Feminist
economic geographers built new ways of understanding gender divisions of labour
exploring why women undertake the majority of domestic labour and caring for
dependents, why men and women do different jobs in the labour market, under
different conditions and for different rewards, but also began to ask how assump-
tions about the characteristics of femininity and masculinity are themselves writ-
ten into job descriptions, embedded within the cultural practices of capitalist
organisations and reflected in different rates of financial remuneration.
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