Description

Book Synopsis
Dependency is a central aspect of human existence, as are dependent care relations: relations between caregivers and young children, persons with disabilities, or frail elderly persons. In this book, Sandra Sullivan-Dunbar argues that many prominent interpretations of Christian love either obscure dependency and care, or fail to adequately address injustice in the global social organization of care. Sullivan-Dunbar engages a wide-ranging interdisciplinary conversation between Christian ethics and economics, political theory, and care scholarship, drawing on the rich body of recent feminist work reintegrating dependency and care into the economic, political, and moral spheres. She identifies essential elements of a Christian ethic of love and justice for dependent care relations in a globalized care economy. She also suggests resources for such an ethic ranging from Catholic social thought, feminist political ethics of care, disability and vulnerability studies, and Christian theologica

Table of Contents
1. Human dependency, justice, and Christian love; 2. The marginalization of dependency and care in political theory; 3. Economics and the erasure of the care economy; 4. Sacrificial models of Christian love: distortions of need, nature, and justice; 5. Agape as equal regard: importing moral boundaries into Christian ethics; 6. Contemporary retrievals of thomistic accounts of love and justice; 7. Elements of justice for a dependent care ethic; 8. Resources for a Christian ethic of dependent care relations.

Human Dependency and Christian Ethics

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    A Hardback by Sandra Sullivan-Dunbar

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      View other formats and editions of Human Dependency and Christian Ethics by Sandra Sullivan-Dunbar

      Publisher: Cambridge University Press
      Publication Date: 05/10/2017
      ISBN13: 9781107168893, 978-1107168893
      ISBN10:
      Also in:
      Religious ethics

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Dependency is a central aspect of human existence, as are dependent care relations: relations between caregivers and young children, persons with disabilities, or frail elderly persons. In this book, Sandra Sullivan-Dunbar argues that many prominent interpretations of Christian love either obscure dependency and care, or fail to adequately address injustice in the global social organization of care. Sullivan-Dunbar engages a wide-ranging interdisciplinary conversation between Christian ethics and economics, political theory, and care scholarship, drawing on the rich body of recent feminist work reintegrating dependency and care into the economic, political, and moral spheres. She identifies essential elements of a Christian ethic of love and justice for dependent care relations in a globalized care economy. She also suggests resources for such an ethic ranging from Catholic social thought, feminist political ethics of care, disability and vulnerability studies, and Christian theologica

      Table of Contents
      1. Human dependency, justice, and Christian love; 2. The marginalization of dependency and care in political theory; 3. Economics and the erasure of the care economy; 4. Sacrificial models of Christian love: distortions of need, nature, and justice; 5. Agape as equal regard: importing moral boundaries into Christian ethics; 6. Contemporary retrievals of thomistic accounts of love and justice; 7. Elements of justice for a dependent care ethic; 8. Resources for a Christian ethic of dependent care relations.

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