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‘Not your “poor dear”’ : Practices and politics of care in women’s non-profit housing in Vancouver, Canada Thompson, Samantha
Abstract
Care is a political process, a set of social relations, and a marketized product. The spatialization of care is complicated when there are diverse caring relations within sites of marketized care. I focus on how care is produced and conceived in non-profit housing for women, in Vancouver, Canada, and how people experience and feel about their homes. I demonstrate the significance of mutual care, caring relations that subvert the giver-receiver hierarchy, and socio-spatial practices that enact care in ways that seek to rewrite structural and historical oppressions that shape women’s experiences of housing. I argue that care in this non-profit housing is entwined within a set of relationships, which range communal practices of care to friction and fragility. This underscores that relationships of care remain susceptible to politics, conflict, and institutional shifts. Finally, I theorize that the provision of mutual care from tenants to their neighbours is a significant element within a wider complex of care in non-profit housing sites.
Item Metadata
| Title |
‘Not your “poor dear”’ : Practices and politics of care in women’s non-profit housing in Vancouver, Canada
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| Creator | |
| Publisher |
Routledge
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| Date Issued |
2021
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| Description |
Care is a political process, a set of social relations, and a marketized product. The spatialization of care is complicated when there are diverse caring relations within sites of marketized care. I focus on how care is produced and conceived in non-profit housing for women, in Vancouver, Canada, and how people experience and feel about their homes. I demonstrate the significance of mutual care, caring relations that subvert the giver-receiver hierarchy, and socio-spatial practices that enact care in ways that seek to rewrite structural and historical oppressions that shape women’s experiences of housing. I argue that care in this non-profit housing is entwined within a set of relationships, which range communal practices of care to friction and fragility. This underscores that relationships of care remain susceptible to politics, conflict, and institutional shifts. Finally, I theorize that the provision of mutual care from tenants to their neighbours is a significant element within a wider complex of care in non-profit housing sites.
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| Subject | |
| Geographic Location | |
| Genre | |
| Type | |
| Language |
eng
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| Date Available |
2023-04-13
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| Provider |
Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library
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| Rights |
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
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| DOI |
10.14288/1.0430563
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| URI | |
| Affiliation | |
| Citation |
Thompson, S. (2021). ‘Not your “poor dear”’: Practices and politics of care in women’s non-profit housing in Vancouver, Canada. Gender, Place and Culture, 29(8), 1121-1140.
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| Publisher DOI |
10.1080/0966369X.2021.1937063
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| Peer Review Status |
Reviewed
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| Scholarly Level |
Graduate
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| Rights URI | |
| Aggregated Source Repository |
DSpace
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Item Media
Item Citations and Data
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International