MESA Banner
“In Dubai, It’s Very Difficult:" Neoliberal Foreclosures and Gendered Sacrifices for Work and Family
Abstract
While men and women increasingly aspire to practice egalitarian gender divisions of labor in families, this desire conflicts with the neoliberal organization of work and care. Gender, work, and family scholars, therefore, ask: How do institutional constraints reshape increasingly egalitarian work-family aspirations? Drawing on interviews with 64 Emirati women and men, including 19 parents, in the United Arab Emirates, I examine the cultural impact of neoliberal institutional constraints on work-family aspirations, emotions, and family relations. I find that even as women increasingly join the formal labor force, institutional factors constrain young adults’ work and family aspirations, leading some women to postpone marriage and others to modify their career aims, while guiding men to focus on caring for their families solely through financial provision. Most women and men wish to share responsibility for childcare and breadwinning with a spouse. With public nurseries limited and largely inaccessible, neither women nor men want to rely on nannies or nurseries, potentially unreliable, expensive options for outsourced childcare. Across class lines, fears of economic insecurity drive young Emirati men to relinquish their progressive desires for present, emotionally involved fatherhood. Men’s concerns are rooted in rising costs and standards of living and neoliberal economic change, which drive many men to commute during the workweek for higher wages in masculinized occupations concentrated in geographically remote and urban centers; some migrate with their nuclear families away from family who might have provided kin care. Meanwhile, women anticipate needing to choose between work and family, finding that even historically feminine occupations demand longer hours and offer diminishing benefits to support work-family balance. The emotionally charged process of closing the distance between work-family aspirations and institutional constraints has relational consequences. Feeling disappointed and frustrated by their constrained choice, many Emirati men expect their wives to make reciprocal gendered sacrifices. These men feel it is fair for women to step back from their careers to provide the emotionally connected parenting men want to give their children. Thus, despite many families depending on women’s financial contributions, men’s emotional expectations of their wives reinforce the structural forces pushing women to step back from paid labor. While grieving their gendered sacrifices, young Emiratis “fall back” into quid-pro-quo gendered divisions of labor. Building on Gulf studies of gender, work, and family, these findings emphasize how egalitarian work-family aspirations, without institutional support, can generate conceptions of sacrifice and fairness that reproduce inegalitarian gender divisions of labor.
Discipline
Sociology
Geographic Area
Arab States
Arabian Peninsula
Gulf
UAE
Sub Area
None