cover image: Caregiving in a Crisis: Mothers’ Parenting Experiences and the Persistence of Class-Based Parenting During the COVID-19 Pandemic

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Caregiving in a Crisis: Mothers’ Parenting Experiences and the Persistence of Class-Based Parenting During the COVID-19 Pandemic

1 Sep 2024

Mounting research has revealed how the labor of caregiving and parenting in the United States fell disproportionately to mothers during the COVID-19 pandemic, with negative impacts on mothers’ personal and professional well-being. Here, we advance this growing body of work by examining how mothers’ pandemic-related parenting and caregiving experiences differed across socioeconomic status. We ask the degree to which mothers’ class-based parenting approaches persisted or dissipated in the wake of the pandemic. Drawing on in-depth interviews conducted with 130 mothers caring for children under eighteen in 2020–2021, we find that these parenting patterns largely continued into the pandemic, with mothers’ socioeconomic and employment status shaping how they experienced and navigated this disruption and particularly how they managed competing paid and unpaid labor demands.
motherhood parenting socioeconomic status caregiving covid-19 pandemic

Authors

Priya Fielding-Singh, Elizabeth Talbert, Lisa Hummel, Lauren N. Griffin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7758/RSF.2024.10.4.11
ISBN
2377-8253 2377-8261
Pages
23
Published in
United States of America
Rights
© 2024 Russell Sage Foundation. Fielding-Singh, Priya, Elizabeth Talbert, Lisa Hummel, and Lauren N. Griffin. 2024. “Caregiving in a Crisis: Mothers’ Parenting Experiences and the Persistence of Class-Based Parenting During the COVID-19 Pandemic.” RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 10(4): 225–47. https://doi.org/10.7758/RSF.2024.10.4.11. We thank the American Voices Project leadership, research, and staff team for collecting the data for this article. We appreciate the editors’ and our reviewers’ thoughtful and constructive feedback that advanced our analysis. We are grateful to the mothers who shared their experiences and stories of parenting and caregiving through the pandemic. All authors contributed equally to this work. Direct correspondence to: Priya Fielding-Singh, at priyafs@gmail.com, 4317 25th St., San Francisco, CA 94114, United States; Elizabeth Talbert, at elizabeth.talbert@drake.edu, Department of Anthropology and Sociology, Drake University

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