Transforming the Politics and Practices of Caring
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Köp båda 2 för 1008 kr'This welcome incisive critical analysis of state-of-the-art knowledge surrounding the ethics of care in social work and related disciplines takes care out of the home and into the community, embedding it in power-defined social relations and the intersecting injustices that impact on everyday life. Its editors and contributors have made a welcome contribution to ethical and political theory in critical social work' Mel Gray, University of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia
Bob Pease is Honorary Professor in the School of Humanities and Social Science at Deakin University and Adjunct Professor in the Institute for the Study of Social Change at the University of Tasmania. He has published extensively on masculinity politics and critical social work practice, including four books as single author and 12 books as co-editor, as well as numerous book chapters and journal articles. Anthea Vreugdenhil is Senior Lecturer in Social Work at the University of Tasmania and a Churchill Fellow. Her research program is broadly situated in the area of care, with a focus on aged care and the changing nature of care in social work and society. Anthea has a track record of high-impact publications, underpinned by a strong policy and practice focus. Sonya Stanford is Head of Social Work at the University of Tasmania. Her research speaks back to risk thinking and risk practices by critically examining how rationalities and practices of risk impact the wellbeing and outcomes of people who use and deliver welfare services. As a risk researcher, Sonyas research has focused on a wide range of risk dilemmas that arise in social and health care including in suicide risk assessments. Her co-edited book Beyond the Risk Paradigm in Mental Health Policy and Practice (with Sharland, Heller and Warner) was published by Palgrave in 2017.
Notes on Contributors Foreword (Brid Featherstone, University of Huddersfield, England) Part I. Framing Care Chapter 1: Towards a critical ethics of care in social work (Bob Pease, Anthea Vreugdenhil and Sonya Stanford) Chapter 2: Social ethics of care in a context of social neglect: A five country discussion (Donna Baines) Chapter 3: Re-imagining social works engagement with care: Intimations from a progressive and critically connected paradigm (Martyn Jones) Chapter 4: Duty of care or duty to care: The responsibilisation of social work (Anthea Vreugdenhil) Chapter 5: Care and justice: Two sides of the same coin of a critical care ethics in social work (Jenny Hay) Part II. Situating Care Chapter 6: The risks of care and caring about risk in mental health (Anne-Maree Sawyer and Sonya Stanford) Chapter 7: Ive got your back: Learning with homeless people about care, mutuality and solidarity (Anne Coleman) Chapter 8: From state to market: Reclaiming a critical ethic of elder care (Sharon Moore) Chapter 9: Protecting children within a relationship-based feminist care ethic (Maria Harries) Chapter 10: Caring in an uncaring context: Towards a critical ethics of care in social work with people seeking asylum (Sharlene Nipperess) Chapter 11: Humanitarian aid and social development: A political ethics of care of international social work practice (Richard Hugman) Part III. Unsettling Care Chapter 12: Speaking of care from the periphery: The politics of caring from the post-colonial margins (Ann Joselynn Baltra-Ulloa) Chapter 13: Aboriginal people and caring within a colonised society (Sue Green) Chapter 14: No sex, please: Applying a critical ethic of care perspective to social care provision for older lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) adults (Michele Raithby and Paul Willis) Chapter 15: Critical engagements with the politics of care and disability (Russell Shuttleworth) Part IV. Transforming Care Chapter 16: Conceptualising mothers care work as maternal practice: Implications for feminist practice with mothers (Sarah Epstein) Chapter 17: Do men care? From uncaring masculinities to mens caring practices in social work (Bob Pease) Chapter 18: Where is the love? Meditations on a critical ethics of care and love in social work (Margaret Hughes) Chapter 19: Re-working self care: From individual to collective responsibility through a critical ethic of care (Chris Wever and Simone Zell) Chapter 20: The politics and ethics of climate change: The need for a critical ethics of care in relation to the environment (Jennifer Boddy) Chapter 21: Social work and cross-species care: An intersectional perspective on ethics, principles and practices (Heather Fraser, Nik Taylor and Christine Morley) Afterword (Vivienne Bozalek, University of the Western Cape, South Africa) Index