ABSTRACT
Containing interviews with more than 100 middle-class working parents in the Boston area, Bookman vividly illustrates the inherent conflicts faced by today's two-working-parent families and the often unfortunate consequences for the community. In an important departure from the ongoing debate, she offers a new paradigm for the relationship between paid and unpaid work that could invigorate both family life and the quality of civil society.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |11 pages
Introduction: The Engine that Could
part |1 pages
Part I. Work, Family, and Community in the New Economy
chapter |18 pages
New Terrain for Work and Family: Making the Community Connection
chapter |18 pages
All in the Family: It’s not a Private Affair
part |1 pages
Part II. From Family Connections to Community Involvement
chapter |28 pages
Community as a Starting Point: Place and Participation
chapter |22 pages
More than Roads and Bridges
chapter |24 pages
Childcare and Other Building Blocks of Civil Society
chapter |22 pages
The Pta is not the Problem
chapter |24 pages
Not by Bread Alone
part |1 pages
Part III. Investing in Community: Everybody’s Business