Publication | Closed Access
Rethinking Care Ethics: On the Promise and Potential of an Intersectional Analysis
261
Citations
81
References
2014
Year
Family MedicineCare EthicsBiomedical EthicSocial InclusionFeminist DebateSocial SciencesFeminist Legal StudiesFeminist EthicsGender StudiesCultural DiversityApplied EthicTransnational FeminismsEthical AnalysisBioethicsHealthcare EthicIntersectional AnalysisFeminist ScholarshipIntersectionalityIdentity PoliticsMulticulturalismEthics Of CareFeminist Political TheoryFeminist TheoryAdvance Care EthicsFeminist MethodologiesNursingFeminist PhilosophyMedical EthicsSociologyCritical Reference PointSocial Justice
This article contributes to current debates and discussions in critical social theory about diversity, inclusion/exclusion, power, and social justice by exploring intersectionality as an important theoretical resource to further develop and advance care ethics. Using intersectionality as a critical reference point, the investigation highlights two key shortcomings of care ethics which stem from this ethics’ prioritization of gender and gendered power relations: inadequate conceptualizations of diversity and power. The article draws on concrete examples related to migrant domestic work to illustrate how an intersectionality lens can advance new theoretical insights for understanding caring practices (or lack of them), and generate new methodological and practical strategies for confronting and transforming the deeply entrenched interlocking power inequities that undermine the realization of care in an increasingly complex context of national and international policy and politics.
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