Vulnerability and Response-Ability in the Pandemic Marketplace: Developing an Ethic of Care for Provisioning in Crisis

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dc.identifier.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.15488/16119
dc.identifier.uri https://www.repo.uni-hannover.de/handle/123456789/16246
dc.contributor.author Geiger, Susi
dc.contributor.author Galasso, Ilaria
dc.contributor.author Hangel, Nora
dc.contributor.author Lucivero, Federica
dc.contributor.author Watts, Gemma
dc.date.accessioned 2024-02-06T06:02:19Z
dc.date.available 2024-02-06T06:02:19Z
dc.date.issued 2023
dc.identifier.citation Geiger, S.; Galasso, I.; Hangel, N.; Lucivero, F.; Watts, G.: Vulnerability and Response-Ability in the Pandemic Marketplace: Developing an Ethic of Care for Provisioning in Crisis. In: Journal of Business Ethics (2023), online first. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-023-05541-7
dc.description.abstract This paper draws on the ethics of care to investigate how citizens grappled with ethical tensions in the mundane practice of grocery shopping at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic. We use this case to address the broader question of what it means ‘to care’ in the context of a crisis. Based on a qualitative longitudinal cross-country interview study, we find that the pandemic transformed ordinary shopping spaces into places fraught with a sense of fear and vulnerability. Being forced to face one’s own vulnerability created an opportunity for individuals to relate to one another as significant others through a sense of “response-ability”, or the capacity of people to respond to ethical demands through situated ethical reasoning. We argue for a practical ethos of care in which seemingly small decisions such as how often to go shopping and how much to buy of a particular product serve as a means to relate to both specified and generalized others—and through this, ‘care with’ society. Our study contributes to displacing the continuing prevalence of an abstract and prescriptive morality in consumption ethics with a situated and affective politics of care. This vocabulary seems better suited to reflect on the myriad of small and unheroic care acts in times of crisis and beyond. eng
dc.language.iso eng
dc.publisher Dordrecht : Springer
dc.relation.ispartofseries Journal of Business Ethics (2023), online first
dc.rights CC BY 4.0 Unported
dc.rights.uri https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
dc.subject Consumption ethics eng
dc.subject Covid-19 eng
dc.subject Crisis eng
dc.subject Ethics of care eng
dc.subject Relational ethics eng
dc.subject Response-ability eng
dc.subject Shopping eng
dc.subject Solidarity eng
dc.subject.ddc 300 | Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie, Anthropologie
dc.title Vulnerability and Response-Ability in the Pandemic Marketplace: Developing an Ethic of Care for Provisioning in Crisis eng
dc.type Article
dc.type Text
dc.relation.essn 1573-0697
dc.relation.issn 0167-4544
dc.relation.doi https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-023-05541-7
dc.description.version publishedVersion
tib.accessRights frei zug�nglich


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