From Emancipation through Employment to Emancipation
through Entrepreneurship: An Analysis of the Special
Labor Market Initiatives (BRYT) and Tax Deduction for
Domestic Services (RUT) in Sweden
Authors
Elin Kvist
Department of Sociology, Ume? University
Johanna Overud
Ume? Centre for Gender Studies, Ume? University
Debates on gender equality policy in Sweden assume that women?s labor market participation is
central to gender equality and should be promoted via special initiatives and programs. This paper
examines how gender equality discourses have changed over time, analyzing Swedish state labor
market policy in the 1980s and 1990s, special labor market initiatives to eliminate gender segregation
and encourage nontraditional gendered work choices, and contemporary state subsidies for
paid domestic work (i.e., tax deduction for domestic services). Critically interpreting these reforms
reveals consistencies and continuities in how labor market participation is viewed as the key
promoter of gender equality, revealing transformations in how gender equality is understood and
constructed. A transition is discernible from state-funded programs and reforms to governmental
agencies/authorities and state subsidies to promote enterprise and the growth of specific labor
market sectors.
Author Biographies
Elin Kvist, Department of Sociology, Ume? University
Doctor of Sociology
Johanna Overud, Ume? Centre for Gender Studies, Ume? University