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|a Ethics of care :
|b critical advances in international perspective /
|c edited by Marian Barnes, Tula Brannelly, Lizzie Ward and Nicki Ward.
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|a Bristol, UK :
|b Policy Press,
|c 2015.
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|a 1 online resource (xii, 287 pages)
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|a text
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|a Includes bibliographical references and index.
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|a Vendor-supplied metadata.
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|a "Over the last 20 years there has been a flourishing of work on feminist care ethics. This collection makes a unique contribution to this body of work. The international contributors demonstrate the significance of care ethics as a transformative way of thinking across diverse geographical, policy and interpersonal contexts. From Tronto's analysis of global responsibilities, to Fudge Schormans' re-imagining of care from the perspective of people with learning disabilities, chapters highlight the necessity of thinking about the ethics of care to achieve justice and well-being within policies and practice. This book will be essential reading for all those seeking such outcomes. The international contributors to this unique collection demonstrate the significance of care ethics as a transformative way of thinking across diverse geographical, policy and interpersonal contexts."--Publisher's description.
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|a Intro -- ETHICS OF CARE -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Notes on contributors -- Section One. Conceptual and theoretical developments -- 1. Introduction: the critical significance of care -- Care ethics: personal and political -- Global care and justice -- Care ethics and the historical moment -- the failure of neoliberalism -- Justice, renewal and virtue -- The crisis of and for care -- Book structure -- 2. Democratic caring and global care responsibilities -- Organising care giving in an uncaring world order -- Are caring democracies the solution? -- Caring democracies and nation-states as containers of care -- Conclusion -- 3. Beyond the dyad: exploring the multidimensionality of care -- Introduction -- Origins -- Developments -- Networks and collectives -- Presence/distance -- Intimacy -- Time -- Conclusion -- 4. Caring for ourselves? Self-care and neoliberalism -- Introduction -- Self-care from the perspective of care ethics -- Self-help to self-care: from collective struggle to neoliberal co-option -- Self-care and 'chronic' health conditions: expert patients -- Self-care and 'active ageing': ageing as a 'lifestyle' choice -- Feminist ethics of care: refusing the neoliberal frame -- 5. Care ethics, intersectionality and poststructuralism -- Introduction -- Identity and care ethics: a symbiotic relationship? -- Poststructuralism, intersectionality and a critical ethics of care -- Carer and cared for: new intersections of identity -- Conclusion -- 6. Care ethics and Indigenous values: political, tribal and personal -- Introduction -- Core Maori values that can inform an ethic of care -- Discussion -- Conclusion: inhabiting the moral boundary -- 7. Privilege and responsibility in the South African context -- Introduction -- Privilege, responsibility and privileged irresponsibility.
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|a Instances of privileged irresponsibility from the South African context -- How can privileged irresponsibility be addressed? -- Discussion and conclusion -- 8. Empathy in pursuit of a caring ethic in international development -- Introduction: positioning development ethics after the Millennium Development Goals -- Empathy: the epistemic bridge at the intersections of care -- Empathy as intersubjective process -- Empathy in action: from immersions to the International Child Development Programme -- Conclusions -- Section Two . Care ethics in practice -- 9. Exploring possibilities in telecare for ageing societies -- Introduction -- Experimenting with telecare arrangements: affording valued positions, reciprocity and symmetry -- Telecare comes with new demands and responsibilities -- Telecare creates new work and requires new skills and routines -- Weighing and balancing different values and ideals in care -- Conclusion: is telecare replacing or relying on care and networks? -- 10. Paradoxical constructions in Danish elder care -- Introduction -- Care and recognition -- Changing views on older people -- From gerontology to the elder care sector -- A 'paradigm shift' in day care centres -- Customers or members? -- Is care needed? -- Care or documentation? -- From 'servicing' to activating -- Conclusion -- 11. Contours of matriarchy in care for people living with AIDS -- Introduction -- Concepts and data -- Care as practice -- Care as power -- Conclusion -- 12. HIV care and interdependence in Tanzania and Uganda -- Introduction -- Theorising interdependent caring relations -- Interdependent caring relations within families -- Peer support, care giving and the participation of PLHA 'service users' in healthcare -- Conclusion -- 13. Reciprocity and mutuality: people with learning disabilities as carers -- Introduction -- Mutuality and reciprocity.
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|a Attentiveness: caring about -- Responsibility: caring for -- Competence: care giving -- Responsiveness: care receiving -- Conclusions: caring morality, reciprocity and mutual care -- 14. People with intellectual disabilities (visually) reimagine care -- Introduction -- The 'What's wrong with this picture?' project -- Vulnerability, dependency and the need for care -- Seeing un-care -- Picturing care differently -- Discussion -- Photographic representation as an ethical and political practice of care -- Conclusion -- 15. Care ethics and physical restraint in residential childcare -- Introduction -- Context -- Ethics, residential childcare and physical restraint -- Findings -- Discussion: physical restraint and care ethics? -- Conclusion -- 16. Care for carers: care in the context of medical migration -- Introduction -- Individual autonomies and interdependencies in understanding migration -- Types of vulnerability -- Professional vulnerability -- Personal vulnerability -- Socio-cultural vulnerability -- Caring societies: healthcare market and care policies -- Conclusion -- 17. Mental health service use and the ethics of care: in pursuit of justice -- The issues of care and justice in mental health -- Renewing care and justice with the ethics of care -- Transformations in mental health services -- 18. Conclusion: renewal and transformation -- the importance of an ethics of care -- Barriers, challenges and opportunities -- The personal is political -- Renewing care through dialogue -- Interpersonal relations, subjectivity and identity -- Practising care -- Solidarity and social justice -- Conclusion -- References -- Index.
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|a JSTOR
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|a Caring
|x Moral and ethical aspects.
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|a Medical ethics.
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|a Ethics, Medical
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|a Humanité (Morale)
|x Aspect moral.
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|a Éthique médicale.
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|a FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS
|x Interpersonal Relations.
|2 bisacsh
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|a MEDICAL
|x Health Policy.
|2 bisacsh
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|a Medical ethics
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|a Caring
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|a Barnes, Marian,
|e editor.
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|a Brannelly, Tula.
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|i Print version:
|t Ethics of care : critical advances in international perspective.
|d Bristol, England ; Chicago, Illinois : Policy Press, c2015
|h xii, 287 pages
|z 9781447316541
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856 |
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