ABSTRACT

What does ‘care’ mean in contemporary society? How are caring relationships practised in different contexts? What resources do individuals and collectives draw upon in order to care for, care with and care about themselves and others? How do such relationships and practices relate to broader social processes?

Care shapes people’s everyday lives and relationships and caring relations and practices influence the economies of different societies. This interdisciplinary book takes a nuanced and context-sensitive approach to exploring caring relationships, identities and practices within and across a variety of cultural, familial, geographical and institutional arenas. Grounded in rich empirical research and discussing key theoretical, policy and practice debates, it provides important, yet often neglected, international and cross-cultural perspectives. It is divided into four sections covering: caring within educational institutions; caring amongst communities and networks; caring and families; and caring across the life-course.

Contributing to broader theoretical, philosophical and moral debates associated with the ethics of care, citizenship, justice, relationality and entanglements of power, Critical Approaches to Care is an important work for students and academics studying caring and care work in the fields of health and social care, sociology, social policy, anthropology, education, human geography and politics.

part |54 pages

Caring within educational institutions

part |49 pages

Caring amongst communities and networks

chapter |10 pages

A different way of caring?

An exploration of alternative health care relationships

chapter |10 pages

‘Men's business'?

Black men's caring within black-led community organisations

chapter |13 pages

Tea and Tupperware

Mommy blogging as care, work, and consumption

part |37 pages

Caring for and about families

chapter |10 pages

Foster care in ambiguous contexts

Competing understandings of care

chapter |12 pages

Intellectual disability and mothering

An engagement with ethics of care and emotional work

chapter |10 pages

Working at post-divorce family life

The feminist ethics of care as a framework for exploring fathering after divorce or separation

part |40 pages

Caring across the life course

chapter |11 pages

Who cares?

Exploring the shifting nature of care and caring practices in sibling relationships

chapter |12 pages

Care arrangements of transnational migrant elders

Between family, community and the state

chapter |12 pages

Caring after death

Issues of embodiment and relationality