Gender has been the privileged optic through which care ethics has been theorised. However, a long line of theorists has argued that gender intersects with other vectors such as race, class and disability in the social world, including in caring practices. This paper contributes to the emergent literature on intersectionality and care ethics by focusing on how racialised difference affects care practices and therefore care ethics. It argues that slavery and colonialism have underpinned racial hierarchies marking contemporary racialised care encounters. As a result, racially marked people’s skills are often undervalued and their competency questioned even as race becomes an increasingly important difference between who cares and who receives...
This book chapter is not available through ChesterRep.The ethic of care has developed to become a bo...
A man with Alzheimer’s who wanders around, a caregiver who disconnects the alarm, a daughter acting ...
This Article seeks to disrupt the polarized debate about care that is taking shape among feminist sc...
Aim: Informal caregivers share common experiences in providing care to someone with health and/or so...
As this book shows, care is a concept with multiple, contradictory meanings. We can care about other...
We begin the introductory chapter by reviewing the current state of knowledge about care in social w...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Duke University Press vi...
Over the last 20 years there has been a flourishing of work on feminist care ethics. This collection...
This article explores how ethical agency, as other-oriented caring, emerged from feelings of being d...
Using a Wittgensteinian approach to understanding, this thesis extends and challenges recent feminis...
As the boundaries between nations become more permeable, women are increasingly on the move, travell...
In care ethics, caring is seen to be embedded in practice and locally contingent. However, despite a...
In The Ethics of Care, Fiona Robinson demonstrates how the responsibilities of sustaining life are c...
In Caring, Peta Bowden extends and challenges recent debates on feminist ethics. She takes issue wit...
In The Ethics of Care, Fiona Robinson demonstrates how the responsibilities of sustaining life are c...
This book chapter is not available through ChesterRep.The ethic of care has developed to become a bo...
A man with Alzheimer’s who wanders around, a caregiver who disconnects the alarm, a daughter acting ...
This Article seeks to disrupt the polarized debate about care that is taking shape among feminist sc...
Aim: Informal caregivers share common experiences in providing care to someone with health and/or so...
As this book shows, care is a concept with multiple, contradictory meanings. We can care about other...
We begin the introductory chapter by reviewing the current state of knowledge about care in social w...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Duke University Press vi...
Over the last 20 years there has been a flourishing of work on feminist care ethics. This collection...
This article explores how ethical agency, as other-oriented caring, emerged from feelings of being d...
Using a Wittgensteinian approach to understanding, this thesis extends and challenges recent feminis...
As the boundaries between nations become more permeable, women are increasingly on the move, travell...
In care ethics, caring is seen to be embedded in practice and locally contingent. However, despite a...
In The Ethics of Care, Fiona Robinson demonstrates how the responsibilities of sustaining life are c...
In Caring, Peta Bowden extends and challenges recent debates on feminist ethics. She takes issue wit...
In The Ethics of Care, Fiona Robinson demonstrates how the responsibilities of sustaining life are c...
This book chapter is not available through ChesterRep.The ethic of care has developed to become a bo...
A man with Alzheimer’s who wanders around, a caregiver who disconnects the alarm, a daughter acting ...
This Article seeks to disrupt the polarized debate about care that is taking shape among feminist sc...