Moral Harms and Social Injustices in the Global Care Chains
Abstract
In this article, we identify various kinds of injustice at work in the global care chains by looking at the damages they entail and at some of their ties. Taking as our point of reference an invidious privileges dilemma that poses a real challenge to feminist theories, we analyze first the moral harm that, as Eva Kittay maintains, follows the fracturing of central, interpersonal and affective relationships of the women migrant workers. This specific moral harm of care relationships is not reducible to other kinds of social injustice. These other kinds are identified by applying Nancy Fraser"™s questioning of the frame problem to the global care chains. We can then talk of an interdependence of several genres or axes of injustice (maldistribution, misrecognition and misrepresentation) that work and intersect at several scales.Published
2012-09-28
How to Cite
Gil Martín, F. J., & Palacio Ricondo, T. (2012). Moral Harms and Social Injustices in the Global Care Chains. Dilemata, (10), 151–171. Retrieved from https://dilemata.net/revista/index.php/dilemata/article/view/174
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Section
Debate
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