A crucially important topic in which many FEASTies are likely to be
interested.

Alison

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Ingrid Robeyns <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Tue, Sep 29, 2009 at 3:18 AM
Subject: CfP: Changing social organization of care

CALL FOR PAPERS

CHANGING SOCIAL ORGANIZATION OF CARE AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR SOCIAL
POLITICS

International, interdisciplinary conference
13 – 14 May 2010, Ljubljana, Slovenia

Europe is experiencing a revival of paid domestic and care work in private
homes in the areas of child care, elderly care and household maintenance.
Theory and research point to the combination of socio-economic,
demographic and welfare causes as characteristics of post industrial
societies, which give rise to the care deficit. These characteristics are:
changes in demographic structure of population; changes in family
structures and dynamics, individualization and instability of life and
family courses; feminization of labour force and masculinization of
women’s employment patterns; intensification, flexibilization and
precarization of working conditions in paid employment; global and local
economic inequalities that foster female migration and employment in
insecure work, and persisting gender inequality in sharing domestic and
care work. Policy responses to these developments are slow: they are
either absent (lack of increase in provision of public care services;
deregulation, privatization and refamilization of care; lack of
integration policies) or inadequate (cash for care allowances,
insufficient work/life balance arrangements, introduction of quotas on
migrant care workers), which forces (mainly) women to seek for individual
solutions in the grey economy of insecure care services.
The irregular paid domestic and care workers, regardless of whether they
are migrant or local women, with their activity in the domestic sphere
reorganize the notions of welfare and the relationship between care and
paid work in European societies. Most of this kind of work suffers from
“invisibility”; moving, as it does, through informal networks of family,
kin, friends or acquaintances, and operating without formal contracts
specifying wages, hours of work and working conditions etc., often in
hiding from the state due to illegality. On the supply side, this type of
(mainly) women’s irregular work, low paid and flexible work, carried out
in informal circumstances in the private sphere, falls upon those with the
least options, lowest educational levels, and those who have limited
rights of citizenship: (undocumented) immigrants, older women, long-term
unemployed women, young women seeking their first job, single mothers,
working poor. On the demand side, it is noteworthy that the employment of
an informal paid care worker is a crucial question of class, and that it
is a coping strategy of mainly working women of high socioeconomic level.
This raises the question of crucial dependence of the provision of care in
European societies on social exclusion, poverty, migration, and class,
gender and ethnic inequalities.
The purpose of the conference is to provide an international and
cross-disciplinary space to explore this question. We are particularly
interested in papers and panels that address the following issues:
-       Theoretization of care, social organization of care and (global)
political economy of care
-       Care from perspectives of social justice, social equality and social
inclusion
-       Social inequalities, poverty and “local” care chains
-       Migration and global care chains
-       Intersections of class, race/ethnicity and gender in formal and
informal
care sector
-       Work ethic and care ethic
-       Citizenship and care
-       Demographic decline and care deficit
-       Gender inequalities, women’s employment and care deficit
-       Changing family patterns and care deficit
To apply, please send individual paper proposals (max. 250 words) or
proposals for panels (max. 350 words) of three or four related papers, a
short CV, your institutional affiliation and contact  to
[log in to unmask] Deadline for the submission of abstracts is 15
December 2009; acceptance of papers will be announced on 15 January 2010;
written papers should be submitted by 10 April 2010. Call can be found on
www.mirovni-institut.si.
We are looking for the possibilities of funding accommodation for
participants within the East East: Partnership Beyond Borders Program. We
especially encourage participants from Eastern Europe to apply and for
whom we'll be able to fund travel and accomodation costs.
We are planning to publish selected papers presented at the conference.
The conference Changing social organization of care and its implications
for social politics is part of the project Informal Reproductive Work:
Trends in Slovenia and EU, financed by the Slovenian Research Agency. For
any additional information concerning the conference do not hesitate to
contact:
Majda Hrženjak, [log in to unmask], Živa Humer,
[log in to unmask]

-- 
Alison M. Jaggar
College Professor of Distinction
University of Colorado at Boulder
Philosophy and Women and Gender Studies
Boulder, CO 80309-0232
303-492-8997 (direct line)
303-492-6132 (dept. office)
303-492-8386 (fax)