Cargando…

Ethics of Care : Critical Advances in International Perspective /

"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, pol...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Otros Autores: Brannelly, Tula, Barnes, Marian (Editor )
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Bristol, UK : Policy Press, 2015.
Colección:Book collections on Project MUSE.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.