Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Nanny care in Sweden

Eldén, Sara LU and Anving, Terese LU (2018) Congress of the European Society on Family Relations
Abstract
A new actor has been (re)introduced into family practices in Sweden: the nanny. Previous ways of organizing care for children (mainly through publicly funded daycare) are today being complemented by a growing private market for childcare, often performed by migrant women. In our research project Care for children in an era of private market service we study the practice of doing care and family in Swedish families who hire nannies and au pairs. To grasp the complexity of this practice, we have interviewed all participating actors: nannies/au pairs (n=26), parents (n=29) and children (n=19). This enables us to compare and contrast the ways in which the participants look upon and experience the caring situation in the family. In this paper... (More)
A new actor has been (re)introduced into family practices in Sweden: the nanny. Previous ways of organizing care for children (mainly through publicly funded daycare) are today being complemented by a growing private market for childcare, often performed by migrant women. In our research project Care for children in an era of private market service we study the practice of doing care and family in Swedish families who hire nannies and au pairs. To grasp the complexity of this practice, we have interviewed all participating actors: nannies/au pairs (n=26), parents (n=29) and children (n=19). This enables us to compare and contrast the ways in which the participants look upon and experience the caring situation in the family. In this paper we analyze the small-scale everyday doings and negotiations of care by the involved parties. There is, we argue, a tension between the parents ‘orchestrating’ of the caring practice and their expectations on the character of the caring relationship between the nanny/au pair and the child, and the actual practice of care that the nanny and the child are engaged in, and the specific relationship that develops through this. Parents ‘orchestration’ further resonates with ‘intensive parenting’ ideals and present neoliberal discourses of families’ ‘right to choose’, something that the last decade’s political reforms in Sweden has made possible, for those who can afford it. This in turn means that new forms of class, gender and ethnified inequalities are built into the very core of the care practice. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
conference name
Congress of the European Society on Family Relations
conference location
Porto, Portugal
conference dates
2018-09-05 - 2018-09-08
project
Care for children in an era of private market services: A study of nannies, children and parents
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
d0bc8800-7e55-437f-ba98-f2da8ce1210f
date added to LUP
2018-10-26 10:59:48
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:42:47
@misc{d0bc8800-7e55-437f-ba98-f2da8ce1210f,
  abstract     = {{A new actor has been (re)introduced into family practices in Sweden: the nanny. Previous ways of organizing care for children (mainly through publicly funded daycare) are today being complemented by a growing private market for childcare, often performed by migrant women. In our research project Care for children in an era of private market service we study the practice of doing care and family in Swedish families who hire nannies and au pairs. To grasp the complexity of this practice, we have interviewed all participating actors: nannies/au pairs (n=26), parents (n=29) and children (n=19). This enables us to compare and contrast the ways in which the participants look upon and experience the caring situation in the family. In this paper we analyze the small-scale everyday doings and negotiations of care by the involved parties. There is, we argue, a tension between the parents ‘orchestrating’ of the caring practice and their expectations on the character of the caring relationship between the nanny/au pair and the child, and the actual practice of care that the nanny and the child are engaged in, and the specific relationship that develops through this. Parents ‘orchestration’ further resonates with ‘intensive parenting’ ideals and present neoliberal discourses of families’ ‘right to choose’, something that the last decade’s political reforms in Sweden has made possible, for those who can afford it. This in turn means that new forms of class, gender and ethnified inequalities are built into the very core of the care practice.}},
  author       = {{Eldén, Sara and Anving, Terese}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Nanny care in Sweden}},
  year         = {{2018}},
}