ABSTRACT

Beginning with a focus on the ethical foundations of caregiving in health and expanding towards problems of ethics and justice implicated in a range of issues, this book develops and expands the notion of care itself and its connection to practice.

Organised around the themes of culture as a restraint on caregiving in different social contexts and situations, innovative methods in healthcare, and the way in which culture works to position care as part of a rhetorical approach to dependency, responsibility, and justice, The Ethics of Care presents case studies examining institutional responses to end-of-life issues, the notion of informed consent, biomedicine, indigenous rights and postcolonialism in care and theoretical approaches to the concept of care.

Offering discussions from a variety of disciplinary approaches, including sociology, communication, and social theory, as well as hermeneutics, phenomenology, and deconstruction, this book will appeal to scholars across the social sciences with interests in healthcare, medicine, justice and the question of how we think about care as a notion and social form, and how this is related to practice.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

The dialectic of care

part 1|64 pages

Institutional constraints, consent, and end-of-life

part 2|44 pages

Biomedicine, social services, and reparation in the postcolony

chapter 4|18 pages

The time of a life

Ethics and cancer care in the case of a young First Nations girl

chapter 5|10 pages

University–community collaboration with urban Aboriginal peoples

Case study of the Healing of the Seven Generations Canoe Project

chapter 6|14 pages

Postcolonial negotiations

Care, Aboriginal rights, and the challenge of democracy

part 3|110 pages

Communication, ethical collisions, and the realities of care

chapter 7|13 pages

End-of-life as a symbolic order

Age in an era of mechanical reproduction

chapter 8|29 pages

Good patient–bad patient

The ethical imaginary of cancer

chapter 9|15 pages

The clinical epistemology of Ludwig Binswanger (1881–1966)

Psychiatry as a science of the singular

chapter 11|16 pages

Rethinking the concept of care

chapter |18 pages

Afterword

Care, giving: an ethical critique