Συγγραφέας

Earner-Byrne Lindsey

Τίτλος

“I felt I should be there, all these people talking on my behalf without consulting me”: Gender, Experience and Expertise in the Irish Mixed Economy of Welfare, 1970–1990s

Περιοδικό

Historein: A review of the past and other stories

Τεύχος

21(2)

Έτος

2024

Σύνδεσμος

https://doi.org/10.12681/historein.34021

Περίληψη (Συγγραφέα)

In the early 1970s, Cherish, the first support and advocacy group for unmarried mothers run by unmarried mothers, emerged into the mixed economy of welfare in the Irish Republic. The self-help aspect of the organisation was fundamental to its sociopolitical agenda to remove the stigma associated with unmarried motherhood and the legal status of illegitimacy, to secure welfare payments for this group and to reframe Irish understandings of what constituted a legitimate family. This article explores how Cherish reflected and contributed to a particular moment in Irish gender and welfare history, when notions of responsibility, the role of religion and the state were being redefined. It reveals how the organisation engaged with and reshaped the existing mixed economy of welfare by reframing understandings of expertise, challenging inherent moral biases, and broadening the concept of family.

Λέξεις-Κλειδιά (Συγγραφέα)

Cherish, unmarried mother, institutionalisation, adoption, illegitimacy, Catholic Church, Republic of Ireland, feminism, stigma, shame, discrimination, poverty

Ετικέτες

Πατριαρχία, κοινωνική καταπίεση – περιορισμοί

Επιστημονικό Πεδίο

Ιστορία

Παρατηρήσεις

Ειδικό Τεύχος “Gendering the Mixed Economies of Welfare: Ruptures and Trajectories in Postwar Europe”. Επιμέλεια: Έφη Αβδελά, Δήμητρα Λαμπροπούλου.

Βιβλιογραφική Αναφορά

Earner-Byrne, L. (2024). “I felt I should be there, all these people talking on my behalf without consulting me”: Gender, Experience and Expertise in the Irish Mixed Economy of Welfare, 1970–1990s. Historein: A review of the past and other stories, 21(2), 2-19, https://doi.org/10.12681/historein.34021 21(2): 2-19. https://doi.org/10.12681/historein.34021