This Article seeks to disrupt the polarized debate about care that is taking shape among feminist scholars. Drawing from ethnographic interviews with low-income wo- men in a South Central Los Angeles Head Start program, White sets forth a conception of care that is grounded in historical practices within African American communities for confronting race and gender violence, affirming each person\u27s dignity and potential, and promoting social justice
This article connects the process of healing for women of color and indigenous people with the proce...
This chapter takes a close look at the concept of care considering arguments about care diversity an...
This paper is about three working class women academics in their 40s, who are at different phases in...
This Article seeks to disrupt the polarized debate about care that is taking shape among feminist sc...
In this Commentary on White\u27s article, Abrams examines the differences between two incarnations o...
Gender has been the privileged optic through which care ethics has been theorised. However, a long l...
This research originated in my experiences and observations as a Black woman activist in Milwaukee, ...
This article is concerned with the perspectives on caring developed by academic feminist researchers...
The meanings of care are contested – the approaches to care in the development and feminist literatu...
Neoliberalism, through its emphasis on personal responsibility and individual freedom in acceleratin...
The position I adopt in this study, aligned with Lyotard (1979), asserts that the master narrative g...
© 1998 Dr. Debra Louise HopkinsGendered subjectivities? Who cares! is a study of the unpaid work tha...
This paper contributes to debates on potential connections between care ethics and decoloniality fro...
This study is an investigation into the social nature of self-care. Using the specific case of a phe...
Anne Donchin's article, "Converging Concerns: Feminist Bioethics, Development Theory, and Human Righ...
This article connects the process of healing for women of color and indigenous people with the proce...
This chapter takes a close look at the concept of care considering arguments about care diversity an...
This paper is about three working class women academics in their 40s, who are at different phases in...
This Article seeks to disrupt the polarized debate about care that is taking shape among feminist sc...
In this Commentary on White\u27s article, Abrams examines the differences between two incarnations o...
Gender has been the privileged optic through which care ethics has been theorised. However, a long l...
This research originated in my experiences and observations as a Black woman activist in Milwaukee, ...
This article is concerned with the perspectives on caring developed by academic feminist researchers...
The meanings of care are contested – the approaches to care in the development and feminist literatu...
Neoliberalism, through its emphasis on personal responsibility and individual freedom in acceleratin...
The position I adopt in this study, aligned with Lyotard (1979), asserts that the master narrative g...
© 1998 Dr. Debra Louise HopkinsGendered subjectivities? Who cares! is a study of the unpaid work tha...
This paper contributes to debates on potential connections between care ethics and decoloniality fro...
This study is an investigation into the social nature of self-care. Using the specific case of a phe...
Anne Donchin's article, "Converging Concerns: Feminist Bioethics, Development Theory, and Human Righ...
This article connects the process of healing for women of color and indigenous people with the proce...
This chapter takes a close look at the concept of care considering arguments about care diversity an...
This paper is about three working class women academics in their 40s, who are at different phases in...