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Care and support rights after neoliberalism : balancing competing claims through law and policy / Yvette Maker, University of Melbourne.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Cambridge disability, law and policy seriesPublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2020Description: 1 online resource (xvii, 308 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781108750479 (ebook)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification:
  • 344.01 23/eng/20211220
LOC classification:
  • K1700 .M35 2020
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction -- A feminist dilemma : support unpaid care or support paid work? -- The universal caregiver model : expanding options or imposing new limits? -- Disability rights and carers' advocacy : to reject or recognize care -- A disability rights informed ethics of care : interdependence and common humanity -- A new framework for designing rights-based care and support policy -- Income support for carers of children with disabilities in Australia : background and recent reforms to carer payment (child) -- Care, disability and gender equality in carers' income support : narrow choices and unheard voices -- Incorporating multiple options and perspectives : applying the care and support rights principles to carer payment (child) -- Care and support for adults in England : background and the recent Care Act reforms -- Care, disability and gender equality in English care and support policy : well-being for all with resources for a few? -- Maximizing options and opportunities : aligning the care act with the care and support rights principles -- Conclusions.
Summary: This book offers principles for designing care and support policy to address two persistent sources of tension in the field. The first is the tension between supporting women's unpaid caring and supporting their paid work participation. The second is the tension between carers' claims for support based on the 'burden' of caring and disability rights claims for support for choice and independence for people with disabilities. Policies tend to favor one activity and one constituency over the other. Consequently, individuals' access to resources and choices about how they live are constrained. Using a citizenship rights framework, with insights from human rights law, the principles provide guidance for designing policy and legislation that avoids 'either/or' approaches and addresses the interests of multiple constituencies. Analyses of Australian and English policies demonstrate the value of the principles for developing policy that reduces inequality, responds to 'failures' of neoliberalism, and expands choice for all.
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eBooks eBooks Central Library Law Available EB0152

Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 07 Apr 2022).

Introduction -- A feminist dilemma : support unpaid care or support paid work? -- The universal caregiver model : expanding options or imposing new limits? -- Disability rights and carers' advocacy : to reject or recognize care -- A disability rights informed ethics of care : interdependence and common humanity -- A new framework for designing rights-based care and support policy -- Income support for carers of children with disabilities in Australia : background and recent reforms to carer payment (child) -- Care, disability and gender equality in carers' income support : narrow choices and unheard voices -- Incorporating multiple options and perspectives : applying the care and support rights principles to carer payment (child) -- Care and support for adults in England : background and the recent Care Act reforms -- Care, disability and gender equality in English care and support policy : well-being for all with resources for a few? -- Maximizing options and opportunities : aligning the care act with the care and support rights principles -- Conclusions.

This book offers principles for designing care and support policy to address two persistent sources of tension in the field. The first is the tension between supporting women's unpaid caring and supporting their paid work participation. The second is the tension between carers' claims for support based on the 'burden' of caring and disability rights claims for support for choice and independence for people with disabilities. Policies tend to favor one activity and one constituency over the other. Consequently, individuals' access to resources and choices about how they live are constrained. Using a citizenship rights framework, with insights from human rights law, the principles provide guidance for designing policy and legislation that avoids 'either/or' approaches and addresses the interests of multiple constituencies. Analyses of Australian and English policies demonstrate the value of the principles for developing policy that reduces inequality, responds to 'failures' of neoliberalism, and expands choice for all.

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