OUR RIGHT TO CARE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE

Event



OUR RIGHT TO CARE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE

Apr 10, 2025 - Apr 11, 2025 at - | At the University of Pennsylvania and Crossroads Women's Center, Philadelphia, PA

Co-sponsored by
University of Pennsylvania Center for Africana Studies, School of Social Policy and Practice, School of Nursing, Department of Sociology, Program in Gender,  Sexuality and Women's Studies, Center for Research in Feminist, Queer, and Transgender Studies and  Lauder Institute
Series
Description

Caregiving for family members and other loved ones including children, older, ill and disabled people, overwhelmingly done by women inside and outside the home, keeps economies and society going but impoverishes those who do it.

While caregivers, unwaged and waged, demand that their work be valued and justly rewarded, and those who need their help demand choices about the care they are entitled to, a low-wage, for-profit care industry is booming. This exploitative industry employs mainly women, often of color and/or immigrant, or replaces them with uncaring AI.

The Our Right to Care conference will bring together academics, researchers, advocates, community organizers, unpaid and paid caregivers and those who depend on care locally, nationally and internationally, to look at how caring relationships based on promoting choice, independent living and mutual respect can be financially supported rather than expanding a care industry based on profits, forced dependence, low standards, low pay and exploitation. The conference will establish the human and social right to care and to access the care we choose when we need it.

Considerations:

  • Connection between unwaged family caregiving and low-waged care.
  • Impact of caregiving on women, starting with mothers, who are presently institutionalized by poverty in the double or triple day.
  • Impact of care industry working conditions on paid caregivers and those who depend on care.
  • Disproportionality by gender and race of unpaid and low-paid caregiving.
  • Differences in caregiving and resources for caregivers among countries, North and South, urban and rural.
  • Essential and fundamental role of caregiving for people and the land in the face of and countering ecological collapse and the unraveling of the web of life.

Outcomes:

  •  Displays of historical and archival struggles for money for caregivers
  •  A reading list and compilation of resource material
  •  A publication of the conference proceedings as well as a video recording.
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