Sep 07, 2024  
Catalogue 2023-2024 
    
Catalogue 2023-2024 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

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AMST 359 - Caring Across Generations


1 unit(s)
The ongoing care crisis in America reveals major gaps and obstacles between care needs and care provision. How can we make care more affordable and accessible? How do we ensure safe working conditions for those that provide care? Can the provision of care be socially organized in a different way? Across generations? What actually is care in the first place? This undergraduate seminar seeks to tease out the changing ways care has been theoretically defined over time as well as its unequal provision through empirical studies. We draw on feminist care ethics, sociology of labor, and political theory to explore histories of domestic work, wages for housework campaign, economics of childcare, living with disabilities at home, aging and eldercare, maternal health, veterans’ benefits, and transnational surrogacy among others. Students have the opportunity to make a care plan for a loved one. This entails interviewing their loved one about their needs, creating a budget that accounts for where they want to be cared for long-term, and reviewing federal and state policies to attain affordable care. Students gain an understanding of the current infrastructure that primary caregivers need to navigate in attaining quality and sustained care while refining what we collectively mean by care.

Prerequisite(s): Permission of the instructor.

One 2-hour period.

Not offered in 2023/24.

Course Format: CLS



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