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The Home Stretch by Sally Howard
Acute analysis of why domestic labour still falls disproportionately to women

HOUSEWORK, and who does it, was a key concern of the second-wave feminism of the 1970s, the time of the international Wages For Housework movement and Ann Oakley’s influential study Housewife.

Since then, as journalist Sally Howard argues in her brilliant new book, the issue has dropped off the agenda of mainstream feminism.

Certainly, men do more domestic labour than they used to — an average of just one hour 20 minutes in 1971, compared with 17 hours a week in 2016, according to the UK Office for National Statistics.

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