Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: A Care Movement Born of Necessity
Maurice Hamington and Michael Flower
1. Precarity, Precariousness, and Disability
Eva Feder Kittay
2. Neoliberalism, Moral Precarity, and the Crisis of Care
Sarah Clark Miller
3. Vulnerability, Precarity, and the Ambivalent Interventions of Empathic Care
Vrinda Dalmiya
4. Precariousness, Precarity, Precariat, Precarization, and Social Redundancy: A Substantiated Map for the Ethics of Care
Andries Baart
5. Global Vulnerability: Why Take Care of Future Generations?
Elena Pulcini
6. Care: The Primacy of Being
Luigina Mortari
7. Deliberate Precarity? On the Relation between Care Ethics, Voluntary Precarity, and Voluntary Simplicity
Carlo Leget
8. Precarious Political Ontologies and the Ethics of Care
Maggie FitzGerald
9. Care Ethics and the Precarious Self: A Politics of Eros in a Neoliberal Age
Sacha Ghandeharian
10. Resisting Neoliberalism: A Feminist New Materialist Ethics of Care to Respond to Precarious World(s)
Emilie Dionne
11. Precariousness, Precarity, and Gender-Care Politics in Japan
Yayo Okano
Conclusion: Care as Responsive Infrastructure
Maurice Hamington and Michael Flower
Contributors
Index