2020
DOI: 10.1080/02723638.2020.1785258
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Care, commoning and collectivity: from grand domestic revolution to urban transformation

Abstract: Given profound urban challenges amplified by COVID-19, we need to center anti-racist feminists' lenses on care, commoning, and collectivity in our cultivations and analyses of urban change. We join a chorus of feminists who critique the devaluation, erasure, and isolation of care in the cities that we build and the stories we tell about them. But this is well-traversed territory, the 'me too' tale of every feminist who dreamsa different city or kind of urban theory. So, we outline a research agenda rooted in i… Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…A possible approach to overcome these issues and increase HRQoL of city residents is communal living. This type of living environment is expected to improve the housing crisis and at the same time help people in need, such as disabled older aged persons [ 47 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A possible approach to overcome these issues and increase HRQoL of city residents is communal living. This type of living environment is expected to improve the housing crisis and at the same time help people in need, such as disabled older aged persons [ 47 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our proposal is an answer to the needs to include care work, highlight intersectional social inequities, and environmental injustices in the healthy cities’ movement that the direct and indirect effects of the COVID-19 pandemic have illustrated. The scientific evidence that results from the inclusion of this new approach into urban public health research, together with political will, organising efforts, and economic investment could change city and public space imaginaries and agendas 47 towards cities that are healthy, equitable, caring, just, ecofeminist and sustainable for current and future generations of humans, animals and the ecosystem.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In human geography, commoning is most often used in urban studies and political ecology, to describe the creation of postcapitalist commons, diverse initiatives that involve community-owned and -managed goods and services that 'rebuild the fabric of communities destroyed by years of neoliberal assault on the most basic means of our reproduction' (Federici 2019, 1). Black and feminist approaches to the commons tend to focus on disrupted forms of social reproduction (Morrow and Parker 2020), paying 'particular attention to the everyday practices, social relations and spaces of creativity and social reproduction where people come, share and act together' (Clement et al 2019, 1). Federici's work on commoning provides a global analysis of the isolating of women and minority groups from political power as a central strategy in dispossession from other resources.…”
Section: Commoningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Federici (2019) also charts counter-struggles around the world that create new forms of social organisation, often where women challenge state and intimate violence alongside collectivisation. For example, in a recent paper, Morrow and Parker (2020) highlight safe spaces from sexual and racist violence created by Black, queer and immigrant women's commoning.…”
Section: Commoningmentioning
confidence: 99%