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Shadow care infrastructures: Sustaining life in post-welfare cities

Emma Power, Ilan Wiesel, Emma Mitchell, Kathleen Mee

2022Progress in Human Geography114 citationsDOI

Abstract

Economic restructuring and welfare reform are driving new forms of urban poverty in the global north. Shadow care infrastructures is a new frame for conceptualising the complex and interconnected practices through which marginalised people seek survival in this context. It remaps welfare landscapes across a continuum that includes formal and informal, established and improvised practice, the not-for-profit sector, informal community networks and exchange and the black market. Conceptually, it centres the care practices that sustain life and the infrastructures that sustain them. Activating a ‘shadow geographies’ tradition it foregrounds care infrastructures that are necessary, but rarely visible within, welfare discourse.

Topics & Concepts

WelfareRestructuringShadow (psychology)PovertyContext (archaeology)Black marketEconomic restructuringEconomic growthSociologyBusinessEconomicsMarket economyGeographyFinancePsychotherapistPsychologyArchaeologyHomelessness and Social IssuesMigration, Aging, and Tourism StudiesHousing, Finance, and Neoliberalism
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