This presentation was given at Global Politics, Economy and Society 2011 Graduate Conference, at Oxford Brookes University on 9th Septmeber 2011. The paper accompanying this presentation can be found here: http://lse.academia.edu/HelenBrownCoverdale Copyright Helen Brown Coverdale - work in progress, please do not cite without permission.
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Punishing with care: Revising the conceptual vocabulary of state criminal punishment
Helen Brown Coverdale
PhD Candidate, Law Department, London School of Economics and Political ScienceMy research is funded through the AHRC Doctoral Studentship Block Grant Partnership Scheme
My work is supervised by Professor Nicola Lacey (All Souls College, Oxford) Professor Anne Phillips (LSE Government Department) & Dr Peter Ramsay (LSE Law Department)
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The Ethic of CareHelen Brown Coverdale [email protected] 9th September 2011
[Gilligan's] 'different voice' [is] characterised not by gender but by theme. Its association with women is an empirical observation...The moral imperative that emerges repeatedly in interviews with women is an injunction to care, a responsibility to discern and alleviate the “real and recognizable trouble” of this world...women's moral judgements proceeds from an initial concern with survival to a focus on goodness and finally to a reflective understanding of care as the most adequate guide to the resolution of conflicts in human relationships...in the different voices of women lies the truth of an ethic of care, the tie between relationships and responsibilities, and the origins of aggression in the failure of connection. (Gilligan 1982, pp.5, 100, 105, 173)
Perspective of Care
As an attitude, caring denotes a positive, affective bond and investment in another's well-being. The labor [sic] can be done without the appropriate attitude. Yet without the attitude of care, the open responsiveness to another that is so essential to understanding what another requires is not possible. That is, the labor [sic] unaccompanied by the attitude of care cannot be good care (Kittay 2002, p.259)
Attitude of Care
the meeting of the needs of one person by another person where face-to-face interaction between carer and cared for is a crucial element of the overall activity and where the need is of such a nature that it cannot possibly be met by the person in need herself (Bubeck 1995, p.129)
Practice of Care
Good care requires that the four phases of the care process must fit together into a whole...Such as integration of these parts of caring into a moral whole is not simple. Care involves conflict; to resolve this conflict will require more than an injunction to be atentive, responsible, competent, and responsive...It reuqires a deep and thoughtful knowledge of the situation and of all of the actors' situations, needs and competencies. (Tronto 1993, p.136)
Bubeck, D.E., 1995. Care, Gender and Justice, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Gilligan, C., 1982. In a different voice : psychological theory and women’s development, Cambridge Massachusetts, and London England: Harvard University Press.
Kittay, E.F., 2002. when caring is just and justice is caring. In E. F. Kittay & E. K. Feder, eds. The subjecct of care: Feminist perspectives on dependency. Feminist constructions. Lanham, Md. :: Littlefield Publishers, pp. 257-276.
Tronto, J.C., 1993. Moral Boundaries: A Political Argument for an Ethic of Care, New York: Routledge.