The nursing profession and the marriage bar : crisp white uniform / Breda McTaggart
Material type: TextPublisher: Singapore : Palgrave Macmillan, 2022Description: xiii, 83 pISBN: 9789811970337; 9811970335; 9789811970320Subject(s): Nursing | Glass ceiling (Employment discrimination) | Married womenDDC classification: 610.7309415 Online resources: Click here to access online | Click here to access online | Click here to access onlineItem type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | Gabriel Afolabi Ojo Central Library (Headquarters). | RT41.M38 2022 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0186928 | |
Books | Gabriel Afolabi Ojo Central Library (Headquarters). | RT41.M38 2022 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0186929 | |
Books | Gabriel Afolabi Ojo Central Library (Headquarters). | RT41.M38 2022 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0186930 |
Includes index
Part I: Evolution to Revolution -- Chapter 1: Setting the Scene -- Chapter 2: Ireland's Marriage Bar: The Gold Sovereign -- Chapter 3: A Landscape for Change -- Part II: Nurses Returning to Work -- Chapter 4: A Returning Workplace -- Chapter 5: Homelife, a Balancing Act -- Chapter 6: Community Response -- Part III: Legacy and Lessons -- Chapter 7: Lessons Learned from the Past to Inform the Future -- Chapter 8: Final Thoughts
This book explores Ireland's Marriage Bar, examining its impact on women's lives and the predominantly feminised nursing profession. Information on the history of nursing and the evolution of the nursing profession tends to focus on critical events or key persons who shaped the profession. What is less known and explored is the women nurses' work experiences or how the world outside the ward affected the nurse and the nursing profession at moments in time. This book takes one of these moments in time, the period of the Marriage Bar, and examines the women nurses' lives and the nursing profession during this period of Ireland's history. It does so by adopting a historical perspective and a lived experience perspective of women who had to negotiate this practice. Fifty years on from the Bar removal, as remnants of this time in Ireland's history remain, legislative and constitutional change are required to right the wrongs of the past. Dr Breda Mc Taggart is Head of Faculty of Business and Social Sciences Sligo College, Atlantic Technological University, Ireland
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