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About this book
Hey, ever wondered why motherhood feels like a global tightrope walk in 2025?
This book dives into the paradox of modern motherhood worldwide. It explores how women juggle intense cultural expectations with tough economic realities. The report is structured as a 15-chapter comparative analysis. It covers diverse countries like the US, Sweden, Japan, Germany, Italy, South Korea, Australia, India, China, South Africa, Brazil, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Nigeria. Part I lays theoretical foundations using the US, Sweden, and Japan. It defines "intensive mothering" as child-centered and emotionally demanding. It explains "cognitive labor" as the invisible mental work of family planning. It discusses neoliberal policies in the US causing motherhood penalties. In Sweden, it shows limits of egalitarian policies amid persistent gender gaps. In Japan, it theorizes demographic crises clashing with traditional roles. Part II applies theories to lived experiences in Germany, Italy, South Korea, and Australia. It details Germany's part-time trap and "Rabenmutter" stigma. In Italy, it covers the "child penalty" and "la mamma" ideal. South Korea's chapter focuses on "education fever" turning mothers into managers. Australia's section examines expanding parental leave and "lighthouse parenting." Part III explores intersections like caste in India, state planning in China, and post-apartheid legacies in South Africa. It highlights India's maternal dropout rates. In China, it discusses urban-rural parenting divides. South Africa reveals family resilience amid vulnerability. Part IV innovates theories with Brazil, Mexico, and Saudi Arabia. It proposes "Adaptive Maternal Labor" for Brazil's informal economy. For Mexico, it introduces "Cultural-Economic Dissonance." Saudi Arabia inspires "State-Accelerated Change" via Vision 2030. Part V identifies research gaps using Egypt and Nigeria. It calls for studies on Egypt's empowerment policies' real impact. In Nigeria, it urges research on health-economy links and community supports. Tables compare policies, pay gaps, and penalties across nations. The introduction sets the 2025 paradox. The conclusion urges new paradigms.
What sets this book apart is its global, evidence-based depth that others skim over. Most motherhood books focus on Western experiences or single issues like work-life balance. This one weaves theories with real case studies from 15 countries, revealing unique cultural-economic clashes. It innovates frameworks like Adaptive Maternal Labor, filling gaps in non-Western contexts. Unlike vague advice books, it uses 2025 data for actionable insights on policies and stigmas. It highlights mental health tolls and demographic links often ignored. Its comparative tables provide quick, data-driven overviews missing elsewhere. By blending sociology, economics, and policy, it offers academics, policymakers, and moms a comprehensive tool for change, not just sympathy.
The rest of the book unpacks these ideas with sub-topics, data points, and policy details. You'll see how US moms face no federal leave, leading to burnout. Swedish dads take more leave but moms still manage mentally. Japanese women flee rural norms amid birth declines. German childcare shortages trap moms part-time. Italian familialism relies on grandmas. Korean education fever links to fertility drops. Australian super on leave eases finances. Indian caste affects early births. Chinese Gen Z parents shift styles. South African women build resilience post-apartheid. Brazilian moms adapt informally. Mexican ideals clash with precarity. Saudi reforms double workforce participation. Egyptian laws promise much but deliver little. Nigerian vulnerability demands health-economy research.
This book is independently produced and has no affiliation with any original authors or boards. It is created under nominative fair use for descriptive purposes only.
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Table of contents
- Copyright
- Part I: Theoretical Foundations of 21st-Century Motherhood
- Part II: Practical Applications and Lived Experiences
- Part III: Generating New Knowledge: Intersections and Emerging Dynamics
- Part IV: Developing New Theories: Reconceptualizing Motherhood
- Part V: Future Directions and Research Gaps