Both interdisciplinarity and care are in their own way central concerns for green economics. Green economics has on its agenda a more integrated approach of the economy, the environment and the social. As such, its approach is inherently interdisciplinary. And the concern with the environment calls on a way of relating to the latter in which care, as an orientation, a task and way of acting all play a crucial part. This paper examines the theorising of care in economics, and undertakes to demonstrate that the question addresses categories underpinned by strict economic as well as 'non-economic' presuppositions about the world we live in. By taking care of labour as our category of analysis, and taking as our vantage point the two way relati...
In the long history of philosophical ethics, the emergence of an ethics of care is a recent phenomen...
The analytical approach of standard health economics has so far failed to sufficiently account for t...
Can care-ethics provide an argument for the moral responsibility of economic agents? In mainstream e...
Abstract: Both interdisciplinarity and care are in their own way central concerns for green economic...
This paper examines three distinguishing features of caring: that it involves the development of a r...
In this era of human-induced environmental crisis, it is widely recognised that we need to foster be...
This article seeks to develop an empirically grounded theorization of care. Current care theory tend...
Care is central to the human experience and part of the social provisioning process. Adam Smith reco...
There is growing concern that presently dominant frameworks in economics no longer provide a way of ...
This paper explores the relationship between theories of welfare economics and our understanding of ...
This article reviews the literature in the field of care in terms of the concept and methodology. Th...
Our unprecedented technological, economic, and environmental challenges call for thinking that goes ...
Care is central to the human experience and part of the social provisioning process. Adam Smith reco...
It is common to think of care ethics and justice ethics as being opposed to each other, and also to ...
This paper makes a number of fundamental proposals to reconsider economics by putting human wellbein...
In the long history of philosophical ethics, the emergence of an ethics of care is a recent phenomen...
The analytical approach of standard health economics has so far failed to sufficiently account for t...
Can care-ethics provide an argument for the moral responsibility of economic agents? In mainstream e...
Abstract: Both interdisciplinarity and care are in their own way central concerns for green economic...
This paper examines three distinguishing features of caring: that it involves the development of a r...
In this era of human-induced environmental crisis, it is widely recognised that we need to foster be...
This article seeks to develop an empirically grounded theorization of care. Current care theory tend...
Care is central to the human experience and part of the social provisioning process. Adam Smith reco...
There is growing concern that presently dominant frameworks in economics no longer provide a way of ...
This paper explores the relationship between theories of welfare economics and our understanding of ...
This article reviews the literature in the field of care in terms of the concept and methodology. Th...
Our unprecedented technological, economic, and environmental challenges call for thinking that goes ...
Care is central to the human experience and part of the social provisioning process. Adam Smith reco...
It is common to think of care ethics and justice ethics as being opposed to each other, and also to ...
This paper makes a number of fundamental proposals to reconsider economics by putting human wellbein...
In the long history of philosophical ethics, the emergence of an ethics of care is a recent phenomen...
The analytical approach of standard health economics has so far failed to sufficiently account for t...
Can care-ethics provide an argument for the moral responsibility of economic agents? In mainstream e...