While their increasing number is achieving some academic and public recognition, former carers occupy a liminal status, are often hidden, and experience a range of negative legacies related to caring. Existing research on former carers is limited in both quantity and quality, and former caring tends to be viewed as an end stage of the overall caring trajectory. A number of theories and concepts employed to enrich the wider carers field have the potential to extend understanding about the needs, situations and lived experiences of former carers and to generate new knowledge about former caring as a process and a transition. These include feminist perspectives, lifecourse analysis, the ethic of care, the emotiospatial hermeneutic, emotional l...
In this case study we reflect on a review we conducted of the English-language research literature o...
Carers in academia is a young but growing field, which has quickly expanded since the 2000s and has ...
Continuing carers are carers whose relative has been admitted to long term care. How they view their...
While their increasing number is achieving some academic and public recognition, former carers occup...
Despite a significant growth in the number older former family carers, they remain largely invisible...
Despite a significant growth in the number older former family carers they remain largely invisible ...
This thesis explores the subjective meaning of the post-caring experience for a range of former care...
This paper will focus on the experiences of former carers; individuals who were previously unpaid ca...
This qualitative study was informed by grounded theory and data were gathered primarily through semi...
Family caregiving has been conceptualised as a career that is characterised by key stages, one of wh...
The aim of this review is to explore existing knowledge about former carers. These are individuals w...
Although unpaid informal carers provide the majority of care for older, ill and disabled people in t...
While discourse about care and caring is well developed in the UK, the nature of knowledge generatio...
To date, much of the research conducted in the area of informal family care concentrates on either t...
A growing proportion of the UK population are those described as ‘former carers’: these are carers w...
In this case study we reflect on a review we conducted of the English-language research literature o...
Carers in academia is a young but growing field, which has quickly expanded since the 2000s and has ...
Continuing carers are carers whose relative has been admitted to long term care. How they view their...
While their increasing number is achieving some academic and public recognition, former carers occup...
Despite a significant growth in the number older former family carers, they remain largely invisible...
Despite a significant growth in the number older former family carers they remain largely invisible ...
This thesis explores the subjective meaning of the post-caring experience for a range of former care...
This paper will focus on the experiences of former carers; individuals who were previously unpaid ca...
This qualitative study was informed by grounded theory and data were gathered primarily through semi...
Family caregiving has been conceptualised as a career that is characterised by key stages, one of wh...
The aim of this review is to explore existing knowledge about former carers. These are individuals w...
Although unpaid informal carers provide the majority of care for older, ill and disabled people in t...
While discourse about care and caring is well developed in the UK, the nature of knowledge generatio...
To date, much of the research conducted in the area of informal family care concentrates on either t...
A growing proportion of the UK population are those described as ‘former carers’: these are carers w...
In this case study we reflect on a review we conducted of the English-language research literature o...
Carers in academia is a young but growing field, which has quickly expanded since the 2000s and has ...
Continuing carers are carers whose relative has been admitted to long term care. How they view their...