This final chapter draws together some of the conceptual, methodological and normative threads from preceding chapters to point towards ways to reimagine home and care within research and also in wider politics. The chapter considers how to make the politics of the home more ‘visible’ when crises are often absorbed into everyday lives. Feminist analysis suggests the need to consider new forms of citizenship and political action which can link the home space to wider sites of politics.
Aalbers, M. (2009) ‘The sociology and geography of mortgage markets: reflections on the financial crisis’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 33(2): 281–90.
Adkins, L. (2002) Revisions: Gender and Sexuality in Late Modernity, Milton Keynes: Open University Press.
Adkins, L. (2009) ‘Feminism after measure’, Feminist Theory, 10(3): 323–39.
Alber, E. (2016) ‘Vital conjunctures and the negotiation of future: rural girls between urban middle class households and early marriage’, in N. Sieveking and L. Dallywater (ed.), Vital Conjunctures Revisited – Gender in Times of Uncertainty, Working Paper NR.18: German Research Foundation, pp. 17–27.
Anderson, B. (2010) ‘Preemption, precaution, preparedness: anticipatory action and future geographies’, Progress in Human Geography, 34(6): 777–98.
Angus J., Kontos P., Dyck I., McKeever P. and Poland B. (2005) ‘The personal significance of home: habitus and the experience of receiving long-term home care’, Sociology of Health and Illness, 27(2): 161–87.
Anthias F. (2012) ‘Intersectional what? Social divisions, intersectionality and levels of analysis’, Ethnicities, 13(1): 3–19.
Armstrong, P. (2010) ‘Neoliberalism in action: Canadian perspectives’, in S. Braedley and M. Luxton (eds), Neoliberalism and Everyday Life, Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, pp. 184–201.
Bacchi, C. L. (1999) Women, Policy and Politics: The Construction of Policy Problems, London: SAGE.
Bailey, A. J. (2009) ‘Population geography: lifecourse matters’, Progress in Human Geography, 33(3): 407–18.
Bakker, I. (2007) ‘Social reproduction and the constitution of a gendered political economy’, New Political Economy, 12(4): 541–56.
Barnes, M. (2012) Care in Everyday Life: An Ethic of Care in Practice, Bristol: Policy Press.
Barnes, M. and Prior, D. (eds) (2009) Subversive Citizens: Power, Agency and Resistance in Public Services, Bristol: Policy Press.
Barnes, M., Brannelly, T., Ward L. and Ward N. (eds) (2015) Ethics of Care: Critical Advances in International Perspective, Bristol: Policy Press.
Bassel, L. and Emejulu, A. (2017) Minority Women and Austerity: Survival and Resistance in France and Britain, Bristol: Policy Press.
Beer A. and Faulkner D., with Paris C. and Clower T. (2011) Housing Transitions through the Life Course: Aspirations, Needs and Policy, Bristol: Policy Press.
Béland, D. (2011) ‘The politics of social policy language’, Social Policy & Administration, 4(1): 1–18.
Bell, V. (1999) Feminist Imagination: Genealogies in Feminist Theory, London: SAGE.
Belsky, J., Melhuish, E. C. and Barnes, J. (eds). (2007) The National Evaluation of Sure Start: Does Area-Based Early Intervention Work? Bristol: Policy Press.
Beresford, P. (2008) ‘Whose personalisation?’ Soundings, 40: 8–17.
Berlant, L. (2008) The Female Complaint: The Unfinished Business of Sentimentality in American Culture, Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Bezanson, K. and Luxton, M. (eds) (2006) Social Reproduction: Feminist Political Economy Challenges Neoliberalism, Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press.
Blunt, A. (2005) ‘Cultural geography: cultural geographies of home’, Progress in Human Geography, 29(4): 505–15.
Blunt, A. and Dowling, R. (2006) Home, Abingdon: Routledge.
Bowlby S. (2012a) ‘Recognising the time–space dimensions of care: caringscapes and carescapes’, Environment and Planning A, 44(9): 2101–18.
Bowlby S. (2012b) ‘The home as a space of care’, in S. J. Smith (ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Housing and Home, Oxford: Elsevier, pp. 388–93.
Bowlby S. and McKie L (2018) ‘Care and caring: an ecological framework’, AREA. doi:10.1111/area.12511.
Bowlby, S., Gregory, S. and McKie, L. (1997) ‘“Doing home”: patriarchy, caring, and space’, Women’s Studies International Forum, 20(3): 343–50.
Bowlby, S., McKie L., Gregory, S. and MacPherson, I. (2010) Interdependency and Care over the Lifecourse, London and New York: Routledge.
Brah, A. and Phoenix, A. (2004) ‘Ain’t I a woman? Revisiting intersectionality’, Journal of International Women’s Studies, 5(3): 75–86.
Brickell, K. (2012) ‘“Mapping”and “doing”critical geographies of home’, Progress in Human Geography, 36(2): 225–44.
Brickell, K., Arrigoitia, M. F. and Vasudevan, A. (2017) ‘Geographies of forced eviction: dispossession, violence, resistance’, in K. Brickell, M. Fernández Arrigoitia and A. Vasudevan (eds), Geographies of Forced Eviction, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 1–23.
Brown G. (2015) ‘Marriage and the spare bedroom: exploring the sexual politics of austerity in Britain’, ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies, 14(4): 975–88.
Brown, G., Kraftl, P., Pickerill, J. and Upton, C. (2012) ‘Holding the future together: towards a theorisation of the spaces and times of transition’, Environment and Planning A, 44(7): 1607–23.
Brown, W. (1995) States of Injury: Power and Freedom in Late Modernity, Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Bryson, V. (2007) Gender and the Politics of Time: Feminist Theory and Contemporary Debates, Bristol: Policy Press.
Bryson, V. (2013) ‘Time, care and gender inequalities’, in A. Coote and J. Franklin (eds), Time on our Side: Why We All Need a Shorter Working Week, London: New Economics Foundation, pp. 55–67.
Burchardt, T. (2008) ‘Time and income poverty’, Case Report 57, London: Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion, London School of Economics.
Burchardt, T. (2013) ‘Time, income and freedom’, in A. Coote and J. Franklin (eds), Time on our Side: Why We All Need a Shorter Working Week, London: New Economics Foundation, pp. 69–79.
Cameron, D. (2009) ‘The big society’, Hugo Young Lecture, 10 November 2009, http://www.conservatives.com/News/Speeches/2009/11/David_Cameron_The_Big_Society.aspx (accessed 3 March 2012).
Camfield, L. (2011) ‘Editorial: Young lives in transition: from school to adulthood?’ European Journal of Development Research, 23(5): 669–78.
Christophers, B. (2015) ‘Geographies of finance II: crisis, space and political-economic transformation’, Progress in Human Geography, 39(2): 205–13.
Christophers B. (2018) ‘Intergenerational inequality? Labour, capital and housing through the Ages’, Antipode, 50(1): 101–21.
Clapham D. (2002) ‘Housing pathways: a postmodern analytical framework’, Housing, Theory and Society, 19(2): 57–68.
Clapham D. (2005) The Meaning of Housing: A Pathways Approach, Bristol: Policy Press.
Clark, T. (2002) ‘New Labour’s big idea: joined-up government’, Social Policy and Society, 1(2): 107–17.
Clarke, J. (2005) ‘New Labour’s citizens: activated, empowered, responsibilised, abandoned?’ Critical Social Policy, 25(4): 447–463.
Clarke, J., Newman, J. and Westmarland, L. (2008) ‘The antagonisms of choice: New Labour and the reform of public services’, Social Policy and Society, 7(2): 245–53.
Clarke, J., Newman, J., Smith N., Vidler, E. and Westmarland, L. (2007) Creating Citizen-Consumers: Changing Publics and Changing Public Services, London: SAGE.
Clayton, J., Donovan, C., and Merchant, J. (2015) ‘Emotions of austerity: care and commitment in public service delivery in the north east of England’, Emotion, Space and Society, 14: 24–32.
Colls, R. and Evans, B. (2008) ‘Embodying responsibility: children’s health and supermarket initiatives’, Environment and Planning A, 40(3): 615–31.
Connell, R. (2010) ‘Understanding neoliberalism’, in S. Braedley and M. Luxton (eds), Neoliberalism and Everyday Life, Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press, pp. 22–36.
Coole, D. (2009) ‘Repairing civil society and experimenting with power: a genealogy of social capital’, Political Studies, 57(2): 374–96.
Coote, A. (ed.) (2000) The New Gender Agenda: Why Women Still Want More, London: Institute for Public Policy Research.
Coote, A. (2010) ‘Cameron’s “big society” will leave the poor and powerless behind’, The Guardian, 19 July 2010, http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2010/jul/19/big-society-cameron-equal-opportunity (accessed 4 November 2010).
Coote, A. and Mohun Himmelweit, S. (2013) ‘The problem that has no name: work, care and time’, Soundings, 54 (Summer 2013): 90–103.
Child Poverty Action Group (2017) Work and Pensions Committee Inquiry into the Benefit Cap: written evidence from CPAG, http://www.cpag.org.uk/sites/default/files/CPAG%20Response%20-%20Work%20and%20Pensions%20Committee%20Inquiry%20into%20the%20Benefit%20Cap.pdf (accessed 7 July 2018).
Craig, C. (2007) ‘Community capacity building: something old, something new’, Critical Social Policy, 27(3): 335–59.
Crenshaw, K. W. (1989) ‘Demarginalizing the intersection of race and sex: a black feminist critique of antidiscrimination doctrine, feminist theory and antiracist politics’, University of Chicago Legal Forum, 1989(1): 139–67.
Crenshaw K. W. (1991) ‘Mapping the margins: intersectionality, identity politics, and violence against women of color’, Stanford Law Review, 43(6): 1241–99.
Crompton, R. and Lyonette, C. (2008) ‘Who does the housework? The division of labour within the home’, in A. Park, J. Curtice, K. Thomson, M. Phillips, M. Johnson and E. Clery (eds), British Social Attitudes: The 24th Report, London: SAGE, pp. 53−80.
Davidoff, L. and Hall, C. (2013) Family Fortunes: Men and Women of the English Middle Class 1780–1850, Abingdon: Routledge.
Davies, A., Friedman D., Grimes R. and Taylor B. (2013) Experiences and Effects of the Benefit Cap in Haringey, London: Chartered Institute of Housing, Haringey Council, Cobweb Consulting, http://www.cih.org/resources/PDF/Policy%20free%20download%20pdfs/Experiences%20and%20effects%20of%20the%20benefit%20cap%20in%20Haringey%20-%20October%202013.pdf (accessed 1 March 2016).
Day, C. (2014) ‘Giving the vulnerable a voice: ethical considerations when conducting research with children and young people’, in J. Lunn (ed.), Fieldwork in the Global South: Ethical Challenges and Dilemmas, Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 192–205.
Dean, H. (2010) Understanding Human Need, Bristol: Policy Press.
Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) (2015) Evaluation of Removal of the Spare Room Subsidy, Research Report No. 913, Department for Work and Pensions, https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/506407/rsrs-evaluation.pdf (accessed 15 September 2018).
Department of Health (DH) (2010) A Vision for Adult Social Care: Capable Communities and Active Citizens, London: H.M. Government, Department of Health, http://www.dh.gov.uk/prod_consum_dh/groups/dh_digitalassets/@dh/@en/@ps/documents/digitalasset/dh_121971.pdf (accessed 13 February 2012).
Dhamoon, R. K. (2010) ‘Considerations on mainstreaming intersectionality’, Political Research Quarterly, 64(1): 230–43.
Doling J. and Ronald R. (2010) ‘Home ownership and asset based welfare’, Journal of Housing and Built Environment, 25(2): 165–73.
Dorling D. (2014) All that is Solid: The Great Housing Disaster, London: Allen Lane.
Doyle, M. and Timonen, V. (2009) ‘The different faces of care work: understanding the experiences of the multi-cultural care workforce’, Ageing and Society, 29(3): 337–50.
Duffy, S., Waters, J. and Glasby, J. (2010) ‘Personalisation and adult social care: future options for the reform of public services’, Policy & Politics, 38(4): 493–508.
Dyck, I., Kontos, P., Angus, J. and McKeever, P. (2005) ‘The home as a site for long term care: meanings and management of bodies and spaces’, Health & Place, 11(2): 173–85.
Edwards, M. (2016) ‘The housing crisis and London’, City, 20(2): 222–37.
Edwards, R. (2004) ‘Present and absent in troubling ways: families and social capital debates’, Sociological Review, 52(1): 1–21.
Edwards, R., Franklin, J. and Holland, J. (eds) (2006) Assessing Social Capital: Concept, Policy and Practice, Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars.
Edwards, R., Gillies, V. and Horsley, N. (2016) ‘Early intervention and evidence-based policy and practice: framing and taming’, Social Policy and Society, 15(1): 1–10. doi:10.1017/S1474746415000081.
Eisenstadt, N. (2011) Providing a Sure Start: How Government Discovered Early Childhood, Bristol: Policy Press.
Elder, G. H. J. (1994) ‘Time, human agency, and social change: perspectives on the life course’, Social Psychology Quarterly, 57(1): 4–15.
Emejulu, A. and Bassel, L. (2018) ‘Austerity and the politics of becoming’, JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies, 56(S1): 109–19.
England, K. (2010) ‘Home, work and the shifting geographies of care’, Ethics, Place & Environment, 13(2): 131–50.
England, K. (2017) ‘Home, domestic work and the state’, Critical Social Policy, 37(3): 367–85.
Erel, U., Reynolds, T. and Kaptani, E. (2018) ‘Migrant mothers’ creative interventions into racialized citizenship’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 41(1): 55–72.
Evans, R. (2014) ‘Parental death as a vital conjuncture? Intergenerational care and responsibility following bereavement in Senegal’, Social & Cultural Geography, 15: 547–70.
Everingham, C. (2003) Social Justice and the Politics of Community, Aldershot: Ashgate.
Fawcett Society (2012) The Impact of Austerity on Women, Policy Briefing, https://www.fawcettsociety.org.uk/Handlers/Download.ashx?IDMF=f61c3b7e-b0d9-4968-baf6-e3fa0ef7d17f (accessed 27 September 2018).
Featherstone, B., Gupta, A., Morris, K. and Warner, J. (2018) ‘Let’s stop feeding the risk monster: towards a social model of child protection’, Families, Relationships and Societies, 7(1): 7–22.
Finch J. and Groves, D. (eds) (1983) A Labour of Love: Women, Work and Caring, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Fink, J. (2004) Care: Personal Lives and Social Policy, Bristol: Policy Press.
Fischer, F. (2003) Reframing Public Policy: Discursive Politics and Deliberative Practices, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Fitzpatrick S. and Watts B. (2017) ‘Competing visions: security of tenure and the welfarisation of English social housing’, Housing Studies, 32(8): 1021–38.
Forbes S. H., McCafferty K., Lawson T., Stoby-Fields M., Raftery M., and Yaqoob M. M. (2013) ‘Is lack of suitable housing a barrier to home-based dialysis therapy for patients with end-stage renal disease? A cohort study’, BMJ Open, 3: e002117.
Franklin, J. (2000) ‘After modernisation: gender, the third way and the new politics’, in New Gender Agenda: Why Women Still Want More, London: Institute for Public Policy Research, pp. 15–22.
Franklin, J. (2007) Social Capital: Between Harmony and Dissonance, Families and Social Capital ESRC Research Group Working Paper No. 22, London: London South Bank University.
Franklin, J. and Thomson, R. (2005) ‘(Re)claiming the social: a conversation between feminist, late modern and social capital theories’, Feminist Theory, 6(2): 161–72.
Franks, S. (1999) Having None of It: Women, Men and the Future of Work, London: Granta Books.
Fraser, N. (2009) ‘Feminism, capitalism and the cunning of history’, New Left Review, 56: 97–117.
Fraser, N. (2013) Fortunes of Feminism: From State-Managed Capitalism to Neoliberal Crisis. London: Verso Books.
Fraser, N. (2016) ‘Contradictions of capital and care’, New Left Review, 100: 99–117.
Fraser, N. and Gordon, L. (1994) ‘A genealogy of dependency: tracing a keyword of the U.S. welfare state’, Signs, 19(2): 309–36.
Fraser, N. and Gordon, L. (2002) ‘A genealogy of dependency: tracing a keyword of the U.S. welfare state’, in E. F. Kittay and E. K. Feder (eds), The Subject of Care: Feminist Perspectives on Dependency, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, pp. 14–39.
Fraser, N. and Littler, J. (2014) ‘The fortunes of socialist feminism’, Soundings 58 (Winter 2014): 21–33.
Frazer, E. and Lacey, N. (1993) The Politics of Community: A Feminist Critique of the Liberal–Communitarian debate, Hemel Hempstead: Harvester Wheatsheaf.
Gambles, R. (2010) ‘Going public? Articulations of the personal and political on Mumsnet.com’, in N. Mahony, J. Newman and C. Barnett (eds), Rethinking the Public: Innovations in Research, Theory and Politics, Bristol: Policy Press, pp. 29–42.
Giddens, A. (1998) The Third Way: The Renewal of Social Democracy, Cambridge: Polity Press.
Gilbertson, J., Green, G., Ormandy, D. and Stafford, B. (2008) Ealing Decent Homes: Health Impact Assessment. Sheffield: CRESR, Sheffield Hallam University, http://www.shu.ac.uk/research/cresr/sites/shu.ac.uk/files/ealing-decent-homes-hia.pdf (accessed 6 March 2013).
Gill, R. and Orgad, S. (2018) ‘The amazing bounce-backable woman: resilience and the psychological turn in neoliberalism’, Sociological Research Online. doi:10.1177/1360780418769673.
Gillies, V. (2013) ‘Personalising poverty: parental determinism and the “Big Society” agenda’, in W. Atkinson, S. Roberts and M. Savage (eds), Class Inequality in Austerity Britain: Power, Difference and Suffering, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 90–110.
Gilligan, C. (1982) In a Different Voice: Psychological Theory and Women’s Development, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Gillis, J. R. (1996) A World of Their Own Making: Myth, Ritual, and the Quest for Family Values, New York: Basic Books.
Green, G., Stafford, B. and Pugh, P. (2011) Cost–Benefit Analysis of Improving Living Conditions, CRESR, Sheffield Hallam University, www.shu.ac.uk/_assets/pdf/hsc-better-housing-better-health-leeds.pdf (accessed 6 March 2013).
Groenhout, R. E. (2004) Connected Lives: Human Nature and an Ethics of Care, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
Guardian, The (2016) ‘The bedroom tax explained’, https://www.theguardian.com/society/2016/jan/27/the-bedroom-tax-explained (accessed 3 July 2018).
Power, A., & Hall, E. (2018). Placing care in times of austerity. Social & Cultural Geography, 19(3), 303–13.
Hall, S. (2012) ‘The neoliberal revolution’, in J. Rutherford and S. Davison (eds), The Neoliberal Crisis, London: Soundings, pp. 8–26, https://analepsis.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/the_neoliberal_crisis.pdf (accessed 11 March 2019).
Hall, S. M. (2014) ‘Ethics of ethnography with families: a geographical perspective’, Environment and Planning A, 46(9): 2175–94.
Hall, S. M. (2016) ‘Moral geographies of family: articulating, forming and transmitting moralities in everyday life’, Social & Cultural Geography, 17(8): 1017–39.
Hall, S. M. (2017) ‘Personal, relational and intimate geographies of austerity: ethical and empirical considerations’, Area, 49(3): 303–10.
Hall, S. M. (2018a) ‘The personal is political: feminist geographies of/in austerity’, Geoforum. doi:10.1016/j.geoforum.2018.04.010.
Hall, S. M. (2018b) ‘Everyday austerity: towards relational geographies of family, friendship and intimacy’, Progress in Human Geography. doi:10.1177/0309132518796280.
Hall, S. M. and Ince, A. (2017) ‘Introduction: sharing economies in times of crisis’, in A. Ince and S. M. Hall (eds), Sharing Economies in Times of Crisis, Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 15–30.
Hall, S. M., McIntosh, K., Neitzert, E., Pottinger, L., Sandhu, K., Stephenson, M.-A., Reed, H. and Taylor, L. (2017) Intersecting Inequalities: The Impact of Austerity on Black and Minority Ethnic Women in the UK, London: Runnymede and Women’s Budget Group, https://wbg.org.uk/blog/intersecting-inequalities-impact-austerity-bme-women-uk (accessed 11 March 2019).
Hankivsky O. (2014) ‘Rethinking care ethics: on the promise and potential of an intersectional analysis’, American Political Science Review, 108(2): 252–64.
Hayes L. J. B. (2017) Stories of Care: A Labour of Law – Gender and Class at Work, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
Heaphy, B. (2007) Late Modernity and Social Change: Reconstructing Social and Personal Life, London: Routledge.
Heaphy, B., Smart, C. and Einarsdottir, A. (2013) Same Sex Marriages: New Generations, New Relationships, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
Heath, S. and Calvert, E. (2013) ‘Gifts, loans and intergenerational support for young adults’, Sociology, 47: 1120–35.
Heelas, P., Lash, S. and Morris, P. (eds) (1996) Detraditionalization: Critical Reflections on Authority and Identity, Oxford: Blackwell.
Held V. (1995) ‘The meshing of care and justice’, Hypatia, 10(2): 128–32.
Held, V. (2007) The Ethics of Care, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Hennessey, R. (2009) ‘Open secrets: the affective cultures of organising on Mexico’s northern border’, Feminist Theory, 10(3): 309–22.
Henwood, K., Shirani, F. and Coltart, C. (2010) ‘Fathers and financial risk-taking during the economic downturn: insights from a QLL study of men’s identities-in-the-making’, Twenty-First Century Society, 5(2): 137–47.
Hitchen, E. (2016) ‘Living and feeling the austere’, New Formations, 87: 102–18.
Hochschild, A. R. with Machung, A. (1989) The Second Shift: Working Parents and the Revolution at Home, New York: Viking Press.
Hochschild, A. R. with Machung, A. (2012) (2nd edn) The Second Shift: Working Parents and the Revolution at Home, New York: Penguin Books.
Hochstenbach C. and Boterman W. R. (2015) ‘Navigating the field of housing: housing pathways of young people in Amsterdam’, Journal of Housing and the Built Environment, 30: 257–74.
Hodkinson, S. (2018) ‘Grenfell foretold: a very neoliberal tragedy’, in C. Needham, E. Heins and J. Rees (eds), Social Policy Review 30: Analysis and Debate in Social Policy, 2018, Bristol: Policy Press, pp. 5–26.
Honig, B. (2017) Public Things: Democracy in Disrepair, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Hopkins, P. and Pain, R. (2007) ‘Geographies of age: thinking relationally’, Area, 39(3): 287–94.
Hoppania, H. K. and Vaittien, T. (2015) ‘A household full of bodies: neoliberalism, care and “the political”’, Global Society, 29(1): 70–88.
Hörschelmann, K. (2011) ‘Theorising life transitions: geographical perspectives’, Area, 43(4): 378–83.
Horton, J. (2016) ‘Anticipating service withdrawal: young people in spaces of neoliberalisation, austerity and economic crisis’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 41(4): 349–62.
Hughes, B., McKie, L., Hopkins, D. and Watson, N. (2005) ‘Love’s labours lost? Feminism, the disabled people’s movement and an ethic of care’, Sociology, 39(2): 259–75.
Hulko W. (2009) ‘The time- and context-contingent nature of intersectionality and interlocking oppressions’, Affilia, 24(1): 44–55.
Hutton, W. (1996) The State We’re In, London: Vintage.
Imrie R. (2004a) ‘Housing quality, disability and domesticity’, Housing Studies, 19(5): 685–90.
Imrie R. (2004b) ‘Disability, embodiment and the meaning of home’, Housing Studies, 19(5): 745–63.
Imrie R. and Hall P. (2001) Inclusive Design: Developing and Designing Accessible Environments, London: Spon Press.
Jackson E. (2015) Young Homeless People and Urban Space: Fixed in Mobility, New York: Routledge.
Jackson, R. L. and Hogg, M. A. (2010) ‘Ontological insecurity’, in R. L. Jackson II and M. A. Hogg (eds), Encyclopedia of Identity, Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE, https://sk.sagepub.com/reference/identity/n175.xml (accessed 15 September 2018).
Jacobson, K. (2009) ‘A developed nature: a phenomenological account of the experience of home’, Continental Philosophy Review, 42(3): 355–73.
Jacobson, K. (2010) ‘The experience of home and the space of citizenship’, Southern Journal of Philosophy, 48(3): 219–45.
Jacobson, K. (2011) ‘Embodied domestics, embodied politics: women, home and agoraphobia’, Human Studies, 34(1): 1–21.
Jarrett, T. (2018) Social care: forthcoming Green Paper on older people and parallel programme (England), House of Commons Briefing Paper 8002, 14 August 2018, House of Commons Library, p. 9.
Jenkins, L. (2011) ‘The difference genealogy makes: strategies for politicisation or how to extend capacities for autonomy’, Political Studies, 59(1): 156–74.
Johnson-Hanks, J. (2002) ‘On the limits of life stages in ethnography: toward a theory of vital conjunctures’, American Anthropologist, 104(3): 865–80.
Jupp, E. (2013) ‘Enacting parenting policy? The hybrid spaces of Sure Start Children’s Centres’, Children’s Geographies, 11(2): 173–87.
Jupp, E. (2017) ‘Home space, gender and activism: the visible and the invisible in austere times’, Critical Social Policy, 37(3): 348–66.
Karamessini, M. and Rubery, J. (eds) (2013) Women and Austerity: The Economic Crisis and the Future for Gender Equality, London: Routledge.
Kesby, M., Kindon, S. and Pain, R. (2005) ‘“Participatory” approaches and diagramming techniques’, in R. Flowerdew and D. Martin (eds), Methods in Human Geography: A Guide for Students Doing a Research Project, Harlow: Prentice Hall, pp. 144–66.
Kosberg, J. I. and Garcia, J. L. (1995) Elder Abuse: International and Cross-Cultural Perspectives, New York: Haworth Press.
Lawson, V. (2007) ‘Geographies of care and responsibility’, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 97(1): 1–11.
Leach, R., Phillipson, C., Biggs, S. and Money, A. (2013) ‘Baby boomers, consumption and social change: the bridging generation?’ International Review of Sociology, 23(1): 104–22.
LeBaron, G. (2010) ‘The political economy of the household: neoliberal restructuring, enclosures, and daily life’, Review of International Political Economy, 17(5): 889–912.
Lees, L. (2013) ‘New Labour’s “new urban renewal”: Aylesbury Estate’, Antipode, 46(4): 921–47.
Levitas, R. (2012) ‘The just’s umbrella: austerity and the Big Society in Coalition policy and beyond’, Critical Social Policy, 32(3): 320–42.
Li, T. M. (2007) The Will to Improve: Governmentality, Development, and the Practice of Politics, Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Lister, R. (1998) ‘From equality to social inclusion: New Labour and the welfare state’, Critical Social Policy, 18(2): 215–26.
Lister, R. (2003a) Citizenship: Feminist Perspectives, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
Lister, R. (2003b) ‘Investing in the citizen-workers of the future: transformations in citizenship and the state under New Labour’, Social Policy & Administration, 37(5): 427–43.
Lister, R. (2006) ‘Children (but not women) first: New Labour, child welfare and gender’, Critical Social Policy, 26(2): 315–35.
Lister, R. (2011) ‘The age of responsibility: social policy and citizenship in the early 21st century’, in C. Holden, M. Kilkey and G. Ramia (eds), Social Policy Review 23: Analysis and Debate in Social Policy, 2011, Bristol: Policy Press, pp. 63–84.
Lister, R. (2013) ‘Benefit cuts: how the language of welfare poisoned our social security’, The Guardian, 1 April 2013, http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/apr/01/language-welfare-social-security (accessed 1 April 2013).
Lister, R. and Bennett, F. (2010) ‘The new “champion of progressive ideals”? Cameron’s Conservative Party, poverty, family policy and welfare reform’, Renewal, 18(1/2): 84–108.
Lovelock K. and Martin G. (2016) ‘Eldercare work, migrant care workers, affective care and subjective proximity’, Ethnicity and Health, 21(4): 379–96.
Lowe S. G., Searle B. A. and Smith S. J. (2011) ‘From housing wealth to mortgage debt: the emergence of Britain’s asset-shaped welfare state’, Social Policy and Society, 11(1): 105–16.
Lund, B. (2017) Understanding Housing Policy, Bristol: Policy Press.
Luxton, M. (2010) ‘Doing neoliberalism: perverse individualism in personal life’, in S. Braedley and M. Luxton (eds), Neoliberalism in Everyday Life, Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, pp. 163–83.
Lymbery, M. (2010) ‘A new vision for adult social care? Continuities and change in the care of older people’, Critical Social Policy, 30(1): 5–26.
Lyon, D. and Glucksmann, M. (2008) ‘Comparative configurations of care work across Europe’, Sociology, 42(1): 101–18.
Lyonette C. and Crompton R. (2015) ‘Sharing the load? Partners’ relative earnings and the division of domestic labour’, Work, Employment & Society, 29(1): 23–40.
Mackie P. K. (2012) ‘Housing pathways of disabled young people: evidence for policy and practice’, Housing Studies, 27(6): 805–21.
MacLeavy, J. (2007) ‘Engendering New Labour’s workfarist regime: exploring the intersection of welfare state restructuring and labour market policies in the UK’, Gender, Place & Culture, 14(6): 721–43.
MacLeavy, J. (2011) ‘A “new politics” of austerity, workfare and gender? The UK Coalition government’s welfare reform proposals’, Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, 4(3): 355–67.
MacLeod, G. (2018) ‘The Grenfell Tower atrocity: exposing urban worlds of inequality, injustice, and an impaired democracy’, City, 22(4): 460–89.
Madigan, R. and Munro, M. (1996) ‘“House beautiful”: style and consumption in the home’, Sociology, 30(1): 41–57.
Mallett, S. (2004) ‘Understanding home: a critical review of the literature’, Sociological Review, 52: 62–89.
Marsh A., Gordon D., Pantazis C. and Heslop P. (1999) Home Sweet Home? The Impact of Poor Housing on Health, Bristol: Policy Press.
Marston S. A. (2000) ‘The social construction of scale’, Progress in Human Geography, 24: 219–42.
Martin-Matthews, A. (2007) ‘Situating “home” at the nexus of the public and private spheres: aging, gender and home support work in Canada’, Current Sociology, 55(2): 229–49.
Maslin, K. (2013) ‘The gender-neutral feminism of Hannah Arendt’, Hypatia, 28(3): 585–601.
Massey, D. (2002) Globalisation: What does it mean for geography? Geography, 87(4): 293–96.
Massey D. (2005) For Space, London: SAGE.
Massey D. and Thrift N. (2003) ‘The passion of place’, in R. Johnston and M. Williams (eds), A Century of British Geography, Oxford: Oxford University Press for the British Academy), pp. 275–99.
McDowell, L., Ray, K., Perrons, D., Fagan, C. and Ward, K. (2005) ‘Women’s paid work and moral economies of care’, Social and Cultural Geography, 6(2): 219–35.
McDowell, L., Ward, K., Fagan, C., Perrons, D. and Ray, K. (2006) ‘Connecting time and space: the significance of transformations in women’s work in the city’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 30(1): 141–58.
McKee, K. (2012) ‘Young people, homeownership and future welfare’, Housing Studies, 27(6): 853–62.
McKie, L., Gregory, S. and Bowlby, S. (2002) ‘Shadow times: the temporal and spatial frameworks and experiences of caring and working’, Sociology, 36(4): 897–924.
Miliband, D. (1994) Reinventing the Left, Cambridge: Polity Press.
Milligan, C. (2001) Geographies of Care: Space, Place and the Voluntary Sector, Aldershot: Ashgate.
Milligan, C. and Wiles, J. (2010) ‘Landscapes of care’, Progress in Human Geography, 34(6): 736–54.
Moffatt S., Lawson S., Patterson R., Holding E., Dennison A., Sowden S. and Brown J. (2016) ‘A qualitative study of the impact of the UK “bedroom tax”’, Journal of Public Health, 38(2): 197–205.
Molyneux, M. (2002) ‘Gender and the silences of social capital: lessons from Latin America’, Development and Change, 33(2): 167–88.
Montgomerie J. (2015) ‘Housing based welfare strategies do not work and will not work’, http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/homeownership-and-the-failures-of-asset-based-welfare/ (accessed 3 July 2018).
Morris, J. (1993a) ‘Feminism and disability’, Feminist Review, 43 (Spring): 57–70.
Morris, J. (1993b) Independent Lives? Community Care and Disabled People, London: Macmillan.
Morse, N. and Munro, E. (2018) ‘Museums’ community engagement schemes, austerity and practices of care in two local museum services’, Social & Cultural Geography, 19(3): 357–78.
Mulhall, S. and Swift, A. (1992) Liberals and Communitarians, Oxford: Blackwell.
Mullard, M. and Spicker, P. (1998) Social Policy in a Changing Society, London: Routledge.
Murphy C. and Turner T. (2017) ‘Formal and informal long term care work: policy conflict in a liberal welfare state’, International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 37(3/4): 134–47.
Musson S. and Bowlby S. (2013) Analysis of Outcomes from the Bracknell Forest Homes Major Works Investment Programme: Final Report, Reading: Department of Geography and Environmental Science, University of Reading, https://www.housinglin.org.uk/_assets/Resources/Housing/OtherOrganisation/University_of_Reading_report_into_major_works.pdf (accessed 13 March 2019).
Nadesan, M. H. (2008) Governmentality, Biopower and Everyday Life, New York: Routledge.
National Audit Office (2010) The Decent Homes Programme: Report by the Comptroller and Auditor General, HC 201, 21 January 2010. London: Stationery Office.
Needham, C. (2011) ‘Personalisation: from story-line to practice’, Social Policy & Administration, 45(1): 54–68.
Needham C. (2014) ‘Personalisation: from day centres to community hubs?’ Critical Social Policy, 34(1): 90–108.
Needham, C. (2008) ‘Realising the potential of co-production: negotiating improvements in public services’, Social Policy and Society, 7(2): 221–31.
Needham, C., Heins, E. and Rees, J. (eds) (2018) Social Policy Review 30: Analysis and Debate in Social Policy, 2018, Bristol: Policy Press.
Nelson M. K. (2011) ‘Between family and friendship: the right to care for Anna’, Journal of Family Theory and Review, 3: 241–55.
Newman, J. (2012) Working the Spaces of Power: Activism, Neoliberalism and Gendered Labour, London: Bloomsbury.
Newman, J. (2013) ‘Spaces of power: feminism, neoliberalism and gendered labour’, Social Politics, 20(2): 200–21.
Newman, J. and Tonkens, E. (eds) (2011) Participation, Responsibility and Choice: Summoning the Active Citizen in Western European Welfare States, Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
Nicholson, L. (ed.) (1989) Feminism/postmodernism, New York: Routledge.
Noddings, N (1986) Caring – A Feminine Approach to Ethics and Moral Education, Berkeley: University of California Press.
Nowicki M. (2018) ‘A Britain that everyone is proud to call home? The bedroom tax, political rhetoric and home unmaking in UK housing policy’, Social & Cultural Geography, 19(5): 647–67.
Oliver M. (1990) The Politics of Disablement, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
Overton L. (2010) Housing and Finance in Later Life: A Study of Equity Release Customers, London: Report for Age UK.
Pain, R. (2004) ‘Social geography: participatory research’, Progress in Human Geography, 28(5): 652–63.
Pain, R. (2010) ‘The new geopolitics of fear’, Geography Compass, 4(3): 226–40.
Pain, R. (2014) ‘Everyday terrorism: connecting domestic violence and global terrorism’, Progress in Human Geography, 38(4): 531–50.
Pearson, R. and Elson, D. (2015) ‘Transcending the impact of the financial crisis in the United Kingdom: towards Plan F – a feminist economic strategy’, Feminist Review, 109: 8–30.
Phillips, A. (ed.) (1998) Feminism and Politics, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Pillow, W. (2003) ‘“Bodies are dangerous”: using feminist genealogy as policy studies methodology’, Journal of Educational Policy, 18(2): 145–59.
Pimlott-Wilson, H. (2017) ‘Individualising the future: the emotional geographies of neoliberal governance in young peoples’ aspirations’, Area, 49(3): 288–95.
Powell, M. (2000) ‘New Labour and the third way in the British welfare state: a new and distinctive approach?’ Critical Social Policy, 20(1): 39–60.
Power A. and Gaete-Reyes M. (2018) ‘Neoliberal abandonment in disability housing provision: a look at England and Chile’, Housing Studies. doi:10.1080/02673037.2018.1478068.
Prokhovnik, R. (1999) Rational Woman: A Feminist Critique of Dichotomy, London: Routledge.
Prügl, E. (2015) ‘Neoliberalising feminism’, New Political Economy, 20(4): 614–31.
Pykett, J. (2012) ‘The new maternal state: the gendered politics of governing through behaviour change’, Antipode, 44(1): 217–38.
Quilter-Pinner, H. and Snelling, C. (2017) Saving Social Care: A Fair Funding Settlement for the Future, London: IPPR.
Raghuram, P. (2016) ‘Locating care ethics beyond the global north’, ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies, 15(3): 511–33.
Ranci C. and Pavolini E. (2015) ‘Not all that glitters is gold: long term care reforms in the last two decades in Europe’, Journal of European Social Policy, 25(3): 1–16.
Ransome, P. (2011) ‘“The big society” fact or fiction? A sociological critique’, Sociological Research Online, 16(12), http://www.socresonline.org.uk/16/2/18.html (accessed 3 March 2012).
Raynor, R. (2017) Dramatising austerity: holding a story together (and why it falls apart …). Cultural Geographies, 24(2): 193–212.
Razavi S. (2016) Redistributing unpaid care and sustaining quality care services: a prerequisite for gender equality, UN Women Policy Brief No. 5, http://www.unwomen.org/en/digital-library/publications/2016/3/redistributing-unpaid-care-and-sustaining-quality-care-services#sthash.Kmkv2sHO.dpuf (accessed 12 April 2019).
Razavi S. and Staab S. (eds) (2010) ‘Underpaid and overworked: a cross national perspective on care workers’, special issue, International Labour Review, 149(4).
Renzetti C. M., Edelson, J. L. and Bergen R. K. (eds) (2001) Sourcebook on Violence against Women, Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE.
Robinson, K. and Sheldon, R. (2019) ‘Witnessing loss in the everyday: community buildings in austerity Britain’, Sociological Review, 67(1): 111–25.
Rose, N. (2001) ‘The politics of life itself’, Theory, Culture & Society, 18(6): 1–30.
Rose, N. (2017) ‘Beyond the public/private division: law, power and the family’, in H. Rhoades (ed.), Law and Families, London: Routledge, pp. 33–48.
Rowbotham, S. (1973) Women’s Consciousness, Man’s World, London: Pelican Books.
Rugg J. and Rhodes D. (2018) Vulnerability amongst Low-Income Households in the Private Rented Sector in England, York: Centre for Housing Policy, University of York.
Rustin, M. (2013) ‘A relational society’, Soundings, 54: 23–36.
Ryan, F. (2015) ‘Under austerity, deprivation in the UK is becoming normalised’, New Statesman, 6 May 2015.
Sandhu K. and Sanderson M. (2015) ‘Layers of inequality – a human rights and equality impact assessment of the public spending cuts on black Asian and minority ethnic women in Coventry’, Feminist Review, 109: 169–79.
Sayer A. (2005) ‘Class, moral worth and recognition’, Sociology, 39(5): 947–963.
Schwanen T., Hardill I. and Lucas S. (2012) ‘Spatialities of ageing: the co-construction and co-evolution of old age and space’, Geoforum, 43(6): 1291–95.
Searle B. A. and McCollum D. (2014) ‘Property-based welfare and the search for generational equality’, International Journal of Housing Policy, 14(4): 325–43.
Sevenhuijsen, S. (1998) Citizenship and the Ethics of Care: Feminist Considerations on Justice, Morality and Politics, London: Routledge.
Sevenhuijsen, S. (2002) ‘A third way? Morality, ethics and families: an approach through the ethic of care’, in A. Carling, S. Duncan and R. Edwards (eds), Analysing Families: Morality and Rationality in Policy and Practice, London: Routledge, pp. 129–44.
Sevenhuijsen, S. (2003) ‘The place of care’, Feminist Theory, 4: 179–97.
Shakespeare, T. (2000) Help, Birmingham: Venture Press.
Shelter (2014) The House Price Gap Analysis of House Prices and Earnings, Shelter Policy Library, https://england.shelter.org.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0003/758046/House_price_gap.pdf (accessed 16 March 2016).
Shelter (2015) ‘The benefit cap: who and where?’ Shelter blog, http://blog.shelter.org.uk/2015/05/the-benefit-cap-who-and-where (accessed 16 March 2016).
Simon-Kumar, R. (2011) ‘The analytics of “gendering” the post-neo-liberal state’, Social Politics, 18(3): 441–68.
Slay, J. (2012) Budgets and Beyond: Executive Summary, London: New Economics Foundation, http://www.neweconomics.org/publications/entry/budgets-and-beyond (accessed 15 October 2012).
Slay, J. and Penny, J. (2012) The new austerity and the big society: interim briefing, London: New Economics Foundation.
Smart, C. (2007) Personal Life, Cambridge: Polity Press.
Smith, D. P. (2011) ‘Geographies of long-distance family migration: moving to a “spatial turn”’, Progress in Human Geography, 35(5): 652–68.
Smith, G., Sylva, K., Smith, T., Sammons, P. and Omonigho, A. (2018) Stop Start: Survival, Decline or Closure? Children’s Centres in England, 2018. London: Sutton Trust, https://www.suttontrust.com/research-paper/sure-start-childrens-centres-england/on (accessed 7 December 2018).
Somerville, P. (1992) ‘Homelessness and the meaning of home: rooflessness or rootlessness’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 16: 528–39.
Stacey, J. (1998) Brave New Families: Stories of Domestic Upheaval in Late-Twentieth-Century America, Berkeley: University of California Press.
Stenning, A. (2018) ‘Feeling the squeeze: towards a psychosocial geography of austerity in low-to-middle income families’, Geoforum, doi:10.1016/j.geoforum.2018.09.035.
Taylor-Gooby, P. (2016) ‘The divisive welfare state’, Social Policy & Administration, 50(6): 712–33.
Thomas, C. (1993) ‘De-constructing concepts of care’, Sociology 27(4): 649–69.
Thomas, C. (1997) ‘The baby and the bathwater: disabled women and motherhood in social context’, Sociology of Health & Illness, 19(5): 622–43.
Thuma, A. (2011) ‘Hannah Arendt, agency, and the public space’, in M. Behrensen, L. Lee and A. S. Tekelioglu (eds), Modernities Revisited: Junior Visiting Fellows’ Conferences 29, Vienna: Institute for Human Sciences, http://www.iwm.at/publications/junior-visiting-fellows-conferences/andrea-thuma-2 (accessed 14 December 2013).
Timewise (2017) Caring by Design, London: Timewise Foundation, http://allcatsrgrey.org.uk/wp/download/social_care/1957-Timewise-Caring-by-Design-report-Under-200MB-1.pdf (accessed 12 March 2019).
Tronto, J. (1993) Moral Boundaries: A Political Argument for an Ethic of Care, London: Routledge.
Tronto, J. (2001) ‘Who cares? Public and private caring and the rethinking of citizenship’, in N. J. Hirschmann and U. Liebert (eds), Women and Welfare: Theory and Practice in the United States and Europe, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, pp. 65–83.
Tronto, J. (2005) ‘Care as the work of citizens’, in M. Friedmann (ed.), Women and Citizenship, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 130–47.
Twigg, J. (2000) Bathing: The Body and Community Care, London: Routledge.
Vaiou, D. (2013) ‘Transnational city lives: changing patterns of care and neighbouring’, in L. Peake and M. Rieker (eds), Rethinking Feminist Interventions into the Urban, London and New York: Routledge, pp. 52–67.
Valentine, G. (2007) ‘Theorising and researching intersectionality: a challenge for feminist geography’, Professional Geographer, 59: 10–21.
Varley, A. (2008) ‘A place like this? Stories of dementia, home, and the self’, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 26(1): 47–67.
Veltman, A. (2004) ‘The Sisyphean torture of housework: Simone de Beauvoir and inequitable divisions of domestic work in marriage’, Hypatia, 19(3): 121–43.
Wainwright, H. (2010) ‘Cameron’s “big society” is a toy town’, The Guardian, 14 April 2010, http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2010/apr/14/david-cameron-big-society-conservatives (accessed 8 July 2010).
Walby, S. (2015) Crisis, Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
Walby S., Armstrong, J. and Strid, S. (2012) ‘Intersectionality: multiple inequalities in social theory’, Sociology, 46(2): 224–40.
Ward L. (2015) ‘Caring for ourselves? Self-care and neo-liberalism’, in M. Barnes, T. Branelly, L. Ward and N. Ward (eds), Ethics of Care: Critical Advances in International Perspective, Bristol: Policy Press, pp. 46–56.
Warner, J. (2013) ‘Social work, class politics and risk in the moral panic over Baby P’, Health, Risk & Society, 15(3): 217–33.
Watson, N., McKie, L., Hughes, B., Hopkins, D. and Gregory, S. (2004) ‘(Inter)dependence, needs and care: the potential for disability and feminist theorists to develop an emancipatory model’, Sociology, 38(2): 531–50.
Watt, P. and Minton, A. (2016) ‘London’s housing crisis and its activisms: introduction’, City, 20(2): 204–21.
Wellman B. (1996) ‘Are personal communities local? A Dumptarian reconsideration’, Social Networks, 18(4): 347–54.
Werner, M., Strauss, K., Parker, B., Orzeck, R., Derickson, K. and Bonds, A. (2017) ‘Feminist political economy in geography: Why now, what is different, and what for?’ Geoforum, 79: 1–4.
Wiggan, J. (2012) ‘Telling stories of 21st century welfare: The UK Coalition government and the neo-liberal discourse of worklessness and dependency’, Critical Social Policy, 32(3): 383–405.
Wilkinson E. (2013) ‘Learning to love again: “broken families”, citizenship and the state promotion of coupledom’, Geoforum, 49: 206–13.
Wilkinson, E. and Ortega-Alcázar, I. (2017) ‘A home of one’s own? Housing welfare for “young adults” in times of austerity’, Critical Social Policy, 37(3): 1–19.
Wilkinson, E. and Ortega-Alcázar, I. (2019) ‘The right to be weary? Endurance and exhaustion in austere times’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 44(1): 155–67.
Wilkinson, H. (1998) ‘Still the second sex’, Marxism Today, November/December, 58–9.
Williams, F. (2004) Rethinking Families, London: Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation.
Williams, R. (1976) Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society, London: Fontana.
Wilson, J. A. and Yochim, E. C. (2017) Mothering through Precarity: Women’s Work and Digital Media, Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Wilson, S., Houmøller, K. and Bernays, S. (2012) ‘“Home, and not some house”: young people’s sensory construction of family relationships in domestic spaces’, Children’s Geographies, 10(1): 95–107.
Women’s Budget Group (2016) A cumulative gender impact assessment of ten years of austerity policies: WBG Briefing, https://wbg.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/De_HenauReed_WBG_GIAtaxben_briefing_2016_03_06.pdf (accessed 27 September 2018).
Worth, N. (2009) ‘Understanding youth transition as “becoming”: identity, time and futurity’, Geoforum, 40: 1050–60.
Yeandle S., Chou Y.-C., Fine M., Larkin M. and Milne A. (2017) ‘Care and caring: interdisciplinary perspectives on a societal issue of global significance’, International Journal of Care and Caring, 1(1): 3–25.
Young, I. M. (1997) ‘House and home: feminist variations on a theme’, in Intersecting Voices: Dilemmas of Gender, Political Philosophy and Policy, Princeton: Princeton University Press, pp. 134–64.
Young, I. M. (2005) ‘House and home: feminist variations on a theme’, in On Female Body Experience: ‘Throwing Like a Girl’ and Other Essays, New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 123–54.
May 2022 onwards | Past Year | Past 30 Days | |
---|---|---|---|
Abstract Views | 23 | 22 | 3 |
Full Text Views | 0 | 0 | 0 |
PDF Downloads | 0 | 0 | 0 |