A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Rethinking care as alternate infrastructure
Abstract We defend a particular view of care as alternate infrastructure. Drawing insights from feminist care ethics we rethink the dynamics between care and infrastructure to trace out more inclusive infrastructural conditions in cities. We use feminist ethics of “caring with” and the relational reading of infrastructure as “a specific form of life” to analyse everyday non-institutional care spaces in three cities. We observe that these care spaces involve particular labour, conditions and agencies in time and place that help recognise actually emerging and everyday care practices producing democratic infrastructural outcomes. These care spaces remain flexible to accommodate the caregiver and the care receiver without differentiating their abilities (or inabilities) of caring. The repertoire of agencies is not always limited to intra-human relations but sometimes extends to more-than-human relations. We develop a framework of diverse “care collectives”" to propose a shift of focus from the normative infrastructure of care that is sometimes produced through and sites of structural inequalities, elsewhere described as “infrastructural violence”. We conclude, a care-full infrastructural ‘turn’ in geographical and urban studies is timely to transform the social and political thinking in the treatment of ‘others’ – a necessary step to establish public care for participatory urban flourishing.
Highlights Tronto's fifth phase of care, "caring with" helps to recognise relations of democratic and public care. Infrastructures constitute dynamic structures and practices that organise social and material lives. Agencies of care are not limited to human communities, but include 'more-than-human' communities. An individual's capacity to give or receive care is a right that needs to be ensured. A framework of diverse "care collectives" is proposed to rethink care as alternate infrastructure.
Rethinking care as alternate infrastructure
Abstract We defend a particular view of care as alternate infrastructure. Drawing insights from feminist care ethics we rethink the dynamics between care and infrastructure to trace out more inclusive infrastructural conditions in cities. We use feminist ethics of “caring with” and the relational reading of infrastructure as “a specific form of life” to analyse everyday non-institutional care spaces in three cities. We observe that these care spaces involve particular labour, conditions and agencies in time and place that help recognise actually emerging and everyday care practices producing democratic infrastructural outcomes. These care spaces remain flexible to accommodate the caregiver and the care receiver without differentiating their abilities (or inabilities) of caring. The repertoire of agencies is not always limited to intra-human relations but sometimes extends to more-than-human relations. We develop a framework of diverse “care collectives”" to propose a shift of focus from the normative infrastructure of care that is sometimes produced through and sites of structural inequalities, elsewhere described as “infrastructural violence”. We conclude, a care-full infrastructural ‘turn’ in geographical and urban studies is timely to transform the social and political thinking in the treatment of ‘others’ – a necessary step to establish public care for participatory urban flourishing.
Highlights Tronto's fifth phase of care, "caring with" helps to recognise relations of democratic and public care. Infrastructures constitute dynamic structures and practices that organise social and material lives. Agencies of care are not limited to human communities, but include 'more-than-human' communities. An individual's capacity to give or receive care is a right that needs to be ensured. A framework of diverse "care collectives" is proposed to rethink care as alternate infrastructure.
Rethinking care as alternate infrastructure
Alam, Ashraful (author) / Houston, Donna (author)
Cities ; 100
2020-02-18
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Rethinking Infrastructure Design
Springer Verlag | 2014
|Rethinking Urban Infrastructure
Online Contents | 1994
Rethinking public participation in infrastructure projects
Online Contents | 2012
|Rethinking approaches to sustainable transport infrastructure
British Library Online Contents | 2011
|