Towards a critical theory of care
OUTPUT TYPE: Chapter in Monograph
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2014
TITLE AUTHOR(S): V.Reddy, S.Meyer, T.Shefer, T.Meyiwa
SOURCE EDITOR(S): V.Reddy, S.Meyer, T.Shefer, T.Meyiwa
KEYWORDS: INFORMAL CARE, WELL-BEING (HEALTH), WELL-BEING (SOCIETY)
DEPARTMENT: Equitable Education and Economies (IED)
Print: HSRC Library: shelf number 8312
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/2301
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/2301
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
Abstract
Care is existential - without it human beings do not live. Good care is indispensable to the flourishing, wellbeing and prosperity of individuals and societies. The better the care, the greater the prospects for human development. Yet, there is a persistent disjunction between the existential significance of care and the attention given to it. Many people habitually overlook care in everyday life and pay scant attention to it intellectually. Perhaps this is because they have normalised its efficacy, or have received notions about care. The price for such neglect is flawed care practices, unsound care policies, and discordant care arrangements. On closer inspection, what might initially seem like a mere oversight turns out to be, to some extent, strategic disregard. Often, the significance of care is not only conveniently overlooked, but strategically repressed. This has wide-ranging effects: care needs can go unattended and caregiving can go unacknowledged.-
Related Research Outputs:
- Review of evidence-based interventions to support families and households, and to build capacities of communities to provide long-term care and support to children and households
- Annotated bibliography of evidence-based interventions to support families and households, and to build capacities of communities to provide long-term care and support to children and households
- The CYFD child rights and well-being monitoring research programme
- Health care-seeking behaviour for child illnesses among rural mothers in South Africa: a pilot study
- Going global with indicators of child well-being: indicators of South African children's psychosocial development in the early childhood period: phase 1 & 2 report
- Defining orphaned and vulnerable children
- Spatial and temporal aspects of childhood injuries: implications for injury prevention and safety promotion
- Children learn lessons of suffering
- Going global with indicators of child well-being: indicators of South African children's psychosocial development in the early childhood period: phase 3 report
- Children in difficult circumstances
- The impact of maternal disability on the well-being of children (a pilot study)
- Editorial: monitoring the rights and well-being of South African children?
- Orphans and vulnerable children in distress
- CHAMPioning families to fight AIDS
- Assessing custody and placement of children
- HIV/AIDS and the crisis of care for children
- A census of orphaned and vulnerable children in two villages in Botswana
- Psychosocial issues affecting orphans and vulnerable children in two South African communities
- A census of orphans and vulnerable children in two Zimbabawean districts
- A situational analysis of orphans and vulnerable children in four districts of South Africa