Switch to: References

Add citations

You must login to add citations.
  1. “You're not just in there to do the work”: Depersonalizing policies and the exploitation of home care workers' labor.Sheila M. Neysmith & Jane Aronson - 1996 - Gender and Society 10 (1):59-77.
    Community care for frail elderly people rests heavily on the work of low-status, paraprofessional home care workers. Home care workers describe their work as highly personalized caring labor that often seeps out of its formal boundaries into informal, unpaid activities. Although these activities are valued by workers, their supervisors, elderly clients, and family members, they represent uncompensated and exploited labor. Cost-cutting trends in home care management that seek to depersonalize home care labor are likely to increase its exploitative potential for (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Emotional labor and nursing: an under-appreciated aspect of caring work.Angela Henderson - 2001 - Nursing Inquiry 8 (2):130-138.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   12 citations  
  • Emotive responses to ethical challenges in caring.Gladys Msiska, Pam Smith & Tonks Fawcett - 2014 - Nursing Ethics 21 (1):97-107.
    This article reports findings of a hermeneutic phenomenological study that explored the clinical learning experience for Malawian undergraduate student nurses. The study revealed issues that touch on both nursing education and practice, but the article mainly reports the practice issues. The findings reveal the emotions that healthcare workers in Malawi encounter as a consequence of practising in resource-poor settings. Furthermore, there is severe nursing shortage in most clinical settings in Malawi, and this adversely affects the performance of nurses because of (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  • Care As a Virtue for Journalists.Linda Steiner & Chad M. Okrusch - 2006 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 21 (2-3):102-122.
    The prevailing normative model of contemporary journalism, drawn primarily from a liberal enlightenment tradition emphasizing universal notions of rights, contributes to what many perceive as a crisis in contemporary journalism; at the least, Kantian models are too "thin" to provide an adequate ethical standard. We consider the extent to which an ethic of care, reconceived to address weaknesses identified in recent scholarly critiques, provides journalists with an alternative framework for moral decision making. We use the concept of unequal ethical pull (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   11 citations  
  • Women's sense of responsibility for the care of old people:: “But who else is going to do it?”.Jane Aronson - 1992 - Gender and Society 6 (1):8-29.
    Drawing on a qualitative study of women who cared for their elderly mothers, this article explores women's experiences of feeling responsible for elderly relatives. The minimal provision of public services for old people and the relative absence of brothers and husbands from family caregiving emerge as material constraints shaping women's sense of obligation. This is affirmed by ideologies and assumptions about women's association with caring and family ties that permeate subjects' accounts of their situations. Translating their sense of obligation into (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations