Scholars have described how care cannot be completely commodified or withdrawn because it is a disposition anchored in the commitment to the needs of others. This article advances the literature on care ethics and inequality by examining how care workers resist and negotiate the rationalisation of care work. Building on ethnographic fieldwork on auxiliary nurses in Norwegian nursing homes, the study shows that despite care workers facing increasingly rationalised forms of control, they continue to act out of the caring self, which centres on the desire to give meaningful care. However, by addressing how power differences and ethnic stratification between workers influence their strategies of coping and resistance, the findings also illustra...
This thesis is an ethnography of care work conducted in two differently priced private residential h...
The Ethics of Care (EoC) theory has been widely applied in the field of management, and there is a g...
There are approximately 4.4 million direct-care workers in the United States. Comprising the labor o...
Scholars have described how care cannot be completely commodified or withdrawn because it is a dispo...
The current political economy imposes cost-saving rationalisation within home care work. In this con...
The article analyzes the phenomenon of “politicization of caring,” observed in studies of nurse labo...
Public care work organisations in Northern Europe often seek to increase their economic efficiency i...
Organization and management researchers praise the value of care in the workplace. However, they ove...
Drawing on a case study conducted in a private residential care home, this article examines the emot...
This project represents a sustained critique of the reductive logic of rationalized healthcare deliv...
This article explores care workers and working carers' experiences of work. It focuses on how both g...
Aims: The article examines nurses’ experiences to institutionally enforced choices they must make re...
The article analyzes the status of care work in capitalist societies. Care is a necessity in the con...
The article analyses the compulsory care of drug misusers in Sweden. An historical analysis of this ...
Traditional understandings of care-giving assume care practices are clear to others and unambiguousl...
This thesis is an ethnography of care work conducted in two differently priced private residential h...
The Ethics of Care (EoC) theory has been widely applied in the field of management, and there is a g...
There are approximately 4.4 million direct-care workers in the United States. Comprising the labor o...
Scholars have described how care cannot be completely commodified or withdrawn because it is a dispo...
The current political economy imposes cost-saving rationalisation within home care work. In this con...
The article analyzes the phenomenon of “politicization of caring,” observed in studies of nurse labo...
Public care work organisations in Northern Europe often seek to increase their economic efficiency i...
Organization and management researchers praise the value of care in the workplace. However, they ove...
Drawing on a case study conducted in a private residential care home, this article examines the emot...
This project represents a sustained critique of the reductive logic of rationalized healthcare deliv...
This article explores care workers and working carers' experiences of work. It focuses on how both g...
Aims: The article examines nurses’ experiences to institutionally enforced choices they must make re...
The article analyzes the status of care work in capitalist societies. Care is a necessity in the con...
The article analyses the compulsory care of drug misusers in Sweden. An historical analysis of this ...
Traditional understandings of care-giving assume care practices are clear to others and unambiguousl...
This thesis is an ethnography of care work conducted in two differently priced private residential h...
The Ethics of Care (EoC) theory has been widely applied in the field of management, and there is a g...
There are approximately 4.4 million direct-care workers in the United States. Comprising the labor o...