Alternative Care Networks January 26, 2024, 12-2 pm ET
Fifth Working Papers Seminar Series 2023-2024 Alternative Care Networks featuring Jieun Cho, Elizabeth Olson and Leiha Edmonds. Commentaries by Tatjana Thelen and Kim England
Race, Health & Disability February 23, 2024 12-2 pm ET
Sixth Working Papers Seminar Series 2023-2024 Race, Health & Disability featuring Jasper Conner and André Marega Pinhel. Commentaries by Mairead Sullivan and LaTonya Trotter
Care Talk 2.0
Welcome to Care Talk 2.0! In February 2008, economist Nancy Folbre launched the original Care Talk blog to reflect on research and policies regarding paid and unpaid carework. Written in a style that made material accessible to journalists, policymakers, and students as well as more seasoned researchers, the blog began with a focus on how to measure the economic contributions of unpaid care, the limitations of commercial models for care provision, and the problems that plague US systems of care provision.
Community Economies, April 19, 10-12 ET
Seventh Working Papers Seminar Series 2023-2024 Communities of Care featuring Alioscia Castronovo and Lina Penati Ferreira. Commentaries by Lindsay Naylor & AbdouMaliq Simone.
Women’s Collectives / Colectivos femeninos, May 3, 12-2 pm ET
Eighth Working Papers Seminar Series 2023-2024 Communities of Care featuring Natalia Hernandez Fajardo and Eva María Villanueva Gutiérrez , with commentaries by C. Cielo and Holly Worthen
Working Papers Series 2022-2023
September 16, 2022. 11 am First seminar of the working papers series featuring Samia Akther-Kahn & André Pinhel.Commentaries by Anne Allison & Deborah Jenson Samia Akhter-Kahn, “Unpaid productive activities and loneliness in later life: Results from the Indonesian Family Life Survey (2000-2014)” André Pinhel, “Racial Classification Categories and Health Inequities Studies in Brazil and USA” […]
What is Care? A Photo Exhibition
In this photovoice exhibition, nine older people from Myanmar living in Mae Sai share their perspectives on their daily lives and what care means to them, shedding light on the importance of nature and religion. This participatory project was part of Samia Akhter-Khan’s PhD project and co-produced with Ben Lu, a 60-year-old woman from Myanmar living in Mae Sai. Pre- and post-comparisons of loneliness show that older people felt less lonely after the project, suggesting that photovoice may function as an intervention for loneliness among older migrants. The exhibition was curated by participants themselves, was exhibited live in Mae Sai and London, and is divided into four parts. The first part focuses on the definition of care and visualizes how older people provide for others
Care and Nature
Part 2 of the exhibition shows how care is not only provided to other people but also to the environment. People care for and about nature by planting trees and growing vegetables. Being in nature has mental health benefits as it makes people feel at ease and helps relieve their worries and stress. As children and the government cannot be relied upon to provide care, older migrants from Myanmar need to rely on themselves, nature, and God
Care and Spirituality
Part 3 focuses on the relationship between care, religion, and spiritual beliefs. As Buddhists, the afterlife can be prepared for by praying, meditating, providing offerings, and doing good deeds. Care for spirits, care for others, and volunteering results in good Karma and a better afterlife. In a sense, providing care for other people, the environment, spirits, and the community becomes a form of self-care, for the present life and the afterlife
Personal Insights
The final part of the exhibition shows insights into people’s individual experiences and lives, reflecting examples of care, and how nature and religion are important avenues for realizing care and preparing for the afterlife. Each person participating has their own view on and message about what is meaningful and important for them in older age
What Does it Mean to Visualize Care?
A panel with multiple scholars, activists, and practitioners and two graphic designers (Anne Dubos and A Visual) wonder what does it mean to visualize care?
Popular Economies
What alternative care strategies are emerging in popular economies? Here a graphic recording on the global panel economias populars