HIGHLIGHTS
SUMMARY
The current Covid-19 pandemic, when so many of the systems of the global order have been found to be lacking, is an ideal time for re-thinking social priorities and values (Walker et_al 2020). For the past several decades, care theorists have called for the elevation of care ethics and care work out of the private realm, associated with women as caregivers, and into the public sphere (Tronto 1993, Hirschmann 2018). The centrality of issues of care during the pandemic creates a prime opportunity for examining care ethics in the ecosocial commons and . . .
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