Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Gemma Carney is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Gemma Carney.


European Journal of Ageing | 2013

Family, state, class and solidarity: re-conceptualising intergenerational solidarity through the grounded theory approach

Virpi Timonen; Catherine Conlon; Thomas Scharf; Gemma Carney

The relationship between class and intergenerational solidarities in the public and private spheres calls for further conceptual and theoretical development. This article discusses the findings from the first wave of a qualitative longitudinal study entitled Changing Generations, conducted in Ireland in 2011–2012, comprising 100 in-depth interviews with men and women across the age and socioeconomic spectrums. Constructivist grounded theory analysis of the data gives rise to the following postulates: (1) intergenerational solidarity at the family level is strongly contoured by socioeconomic status (SES); (2) intergenerational solidarity evolves as family generations observe each others’ practices and adjust their expectations accordingly; (3) intergenerational solidarity within families is also shaped by the public sphere (the welfare state) that generates varying expectations and levels of solidarity regarding State supports for different age groups, again largely dependent on SES; (4) the liberal welfare state context, especially at a time of economic crisis, enhances the significance of intergenerational solidarity within families. We conclude by calling for research that is attuned to age/generation, gender and class, and how these operate across the family and societal levels.


Gender & Society | 2014

Women (Re)Negotiating Care across Family Generations Intersections of Gender and Socioeconomic Status

Catherine Conlon; Virpi Timonen; Gemma Carney; Thomas Scharf

Changing Generations, a study of intergenerational relations in Ireland undertaken between 2011 and 2013 by the Social Policy and Ageing Research Centre (SPARC), Trinity College, Dublin, and the Irish Centre for Social Gerontology (ICSG), NUI Galway, used the Constructivist Grounded Theory method to interrogate support and care provision between generations. This article draws on interviews with 52 women ages 18 to 102, allowing for simultaneous analysis of older and younger women’s perspectives. The intersectionality of gender and class emerged as central to the analysis. Socioeconomic positions shape contrasting forms of interdependency among family generations, ranging from “enmeshed” lives among lower socioeconomic groups to “freed” lives among higher socioeconomic groups. Women are initiating changes in how care and support flow across generations. Older women in higher socioeconomic groups are attuned to how emotional capital women expend across family generations can constrain (young) women’s lives. In an expression of solidarity, older women are renegotiating the place of care labor in their own lives and in the lives of younger women. A new reciprocity emerges that amounts to women “undoing gender.” This process is, however, deeply classed as it is women in higher socioeconomic groups whose resources best place them to renegotiate care.


Ageing & Society | 2010

Citizenship and structured dependency : the implications of policy design for senior political power

Gemma Carney

ABSTRACT This paper argues that the structured dependency thesis must be extended to incorporate political power. It outlines a political framework of analysis with which to identify who gains and who loses from social policy. I argue that public policy for older people is a product not only of social structures but also of political decision-making. The Schneider and Ingram (1993) ‘target populations’ model is used to investigate how the social construction of groups as dependent equates with lower levels of influence on policy making. In United Kingdom and European research, older people are identified as politically quiescent, but conversely in the United States seniors are viewed as one of the most influential and cohesive interest groups in the political culture. Why are American seniors perceived as politically powerful, while older people in Europe are viewed as dependent and politically weak? This paper applies the ‘target populations’ model to senior policy in the Republic of Ireland to investigate how theoretical work in the United States may be used to identify the significance of senior power in policy development. I conclude that research must recognise the connections between power, politics and social constructions to investigate how state policies can influence the likelihood that seniors will resist structured dependency using political means.


Critical Social Policy | 2014

‘Blessed are the young, for they shall inherit the national debt’: Solidarity between generations in the Irish crisis

Gemma Carney; Thomas Scharf; Virpi Timonen; Catherine Conlon

Ireland has gained a reputation for peaceable acceptance of austerity following a European Union/International Monetary Fund bailout in 2010. While proponents of austerity praise Ireland’s stoicism, critics of global capitalism argue that individuals and families are paying for mistakes made by elites. However, little is known about the strategies people adopt to cope with cutbacks to welfare entitlements. Drawing on a study of solidarity between generations living in Ireland in 2011–12, this article explores the lived experience of economic crisis and austerity. One hundred interviews with people of all ages and socio-economic backgrounds are analysed using constructivist grounded theory. Data show how austerity impacts differentially according to socio-economic status. While solidarity between generations leads to re-distribution of resources within families, providing some security for people with access to family resources, it reinforces inequality at societal level. We conclude that reliance on family promotes ‘coping’ rather than ‘protesting’ responses to austerity.


Qualitative Research | 2015

‘Emergent reconstruction’ in grounded theory: learning from team-based interview research:

Catherine Conlon; Gemma Carney; Virpi Timonen; Thomas Scharf

Constructivist grounded theory (CGT) methods render an interpretive portrayal, a construction of reality, strengthened when the process of construction is acknowledged. An Irish team study uses CGT to explore intergenerational solidarity at individual, familial and societal levels, and their interface. The study data comprise interviews with 100 people from diverse socio-economic and age groups. The article contributes insights on applying CGT in team-based interview research on a topic with such breadth of scope. This contrasts with the more usual focused inquiry with a defined population. Adapting the method’s guidelines to the specific inquiry involved challenges in: framing the topic conceptually; situating research participants in contrasting social contexts to provide interpretive depth; and generating interview data with which to construct theory. We argue that interrogating the very premise of the inquiry allowed for emergent reconstruction, a goal at the heart of the method.


Action Research | 2012

Participatory action research with and within community activist groups: Capturing the collective experience of Ireland's Community and Voluntary Pillar in social partnership

Gemma Carney; Tony Dundon; Áine Ní Léime

The inclusion of community activists in policy planning is increasingly recognized at the highest international level. This article shows how the use of Participatory Action Research (PAR) can present a deeper and more holistic picture of the experiences of Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) in shaping national-level social policy. By utilizing action-based research, the Community and Voluntary Pillar (CVP) of Ireland’s system of social partnership is shown to be an important agent in deliberating national bargaining outcomes (known as the Towards 2016 national agreement). The key contribution of this research is the reflective methodological considerations in terms of PAR design, execution and participant integration in the research process as a way to enrich and develop a deeper and more informed community of practice.


Irish Political Studies | 2002

Feminism, the Women's Movement and the Internationalisation of Gender Equality Policy: The Case of 'Gender Mainstreaming'

Gemma Carney

Gender mainstreaming represents a significant change in the policy and practice of the Irish state on gender issues. This article examines the role of the womens movement in developing the theory and practice surrounding gender mainstreaming in the Republic of Ireland. It, therefore, critically examines the extent to which non-governmental organizations are involved in the adoption and implementation of internationally driven policy at domestic level. Gender mainstreaming is currently being implemented in over 100 countries around the globe. By tracing its origins to the International Womens Movement this article seeks to identify mainstreaming as a feminist project. In doing so, it draws on feminist theory, particularly on the work of feminists theorizing the international, to examine how a public policy conceived in a social movement percolates into official policy-making systems through international organizations.


Voluntary Sector Review | 2012

'Protecting the most vulnerable' in an economic crisis: a participatory study of civil society organisations in Ireland

Gemma Carney; Tony Dundon; Áine Ní Léime

This paper advances knowledge of how civil society organisations (CSOs) negotiate the shift from boom-time public expenditure to governmental austerity. The study focuses on the Republic of Ireland, where CSOs occupied an important role in providing a voice for‘vulnerable’ citizens in corporatism for over a decade. The global financialcrisis and subsequent austerity measures caused the country’s model of corporatist-style ‘social partnership’ to collapse. The article connects CSOs’ adaptation to austerity measures when protecting the ‘people behind the cuts’ to broader questions about co-optation of civil society through state-led policy-making institutions.


Journal of Intergenerational Relationships | 2012

Intergenerational Solidarity and Justice in Ireland: Toward a New National Dialogue

Virpi Timonen; Thomas Scharf; Catherine Conlon; Gemma Carney

Gross domestic product plummets. Unemployment soars. Large-scale emigration reemerges after a decade of labor-market driven immigration. The International Monetary Fund and European Union are called to bail out the economy. Indebtedness haunts households in the aftermath of a spectacular housing market crash. The Celtic Tiger is firmly consigned to history books as Ireland’s economic fortunes have waned with unprecedented rapidity. The trials of the economy and policy are highly visible in the media and political debates. However, we know little about how these public travails are reflected in the private sphere where the recession is translated into mass emigration of young workers, defaults on mortgages, former twoearner households turning into no-earner families, and cutbacks in health and social care services that leave many younger and older citizens without the supports on which they could rely.


Journal of Women & Aging | 2018

Toward a gender politics of aging

Gemma Carney

ABSTRACT The article proposes a Gender Politics of Aging approach to the study of aging societies. The approach recognizes the feminization of old age, ageism’s roots in sexist discourse, and the need to recognize the role of politics in driving demographic debates. Drawing together arguments from feminist gerontology and political demography, the article argues that the intersection of politics and gender must be considered if appropriate responses to an older, feminized demography are to be produced. I conclude that the work of aging feminists provides a rich vein of research and praxis from which a gender politics of aging approach can draw.

Collaboration


Dive into the Gemma Carney's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thomas Scharf

National University of Ireland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paula Devine

Queen's University Belfast

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Áine Ní Léime

National University of Ireland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tony Dundon

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kieran Walsh

National University of Ireland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Ni Leime

National University of Ireland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. Loftus

University College Dublin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Caroline Finn

National University of Ireland

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge