55 research outputs found
Navigating in the Landscape of Care: A Critical Reflection on Theory and Practise of Care and Ethics
The theory and practise of care is defined and enacted differently in different national as well as cultural contexts, illuminating how differently constructed the personal and societal structures in Europe are. A common trait is however that care work paid or non-paid, private or public is identified with women. To navigate in the landscape of care and ethics requires taking into account the constitutive relation between one’s identity, embodiment and position. The author suggests conceiving care as an existential condition of life demanded from all human beings. This will free care from the identification with women and pave a way towards a more gender equal and just society with less gender segregation in the labour market and at the arena of education
When general practitioners talk about Alcohol: Exploring facilitating and hampering factors for pragmatic case finding
Shifting roles: physiotherapists’ perception of person-centered care during a pre-implementation phase in the acute hospital setting - A phenomenographic study
Quality dementia care: Prerequisites and relational ethics among multicultural healthcare providers
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