Zuzana Uhde's scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Virginia Held: The Ethics of Care. Personal, Political, and Global
  • Article

February 2006

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3,358 Reads

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1,808 Citations

Zuzana Uhde

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Virginia Held

Book Review Virginia Held: The Ethics of Care. Personal, Political, and Global. Oxford, New York, Oxford University Press 2006, 211 s. The book presents the ethics of care as a promising alternative to more familiar moral theories. The ethics of care is only a few decades old, yet it has become a distinct moral theory or normative approach, relevant to global and political matters as well as to the personal relations that can most clearly exemplify care. The book examines the central ideas, characteristics, and potential importance of the ethics of care. It discusses the feminist roots of this moral approach and why the ethics of care can be a morality with universal appeal. The book explores what is meant by "care" and what a caring person is like. Where such other moral theories as Kantian morality and utilitarianism demand impartiality above all, the ethics of care understands the moral import of ties to families and groups. It evaluates such ties, differing from virtue ethics by focusing on caring relations rather than the virtues of individuals. The book proposes how values such as justice, equality, and individual rights can "fit together" with values such as care, trust, mutual consideration, and solidarity. In considering the potential of the ethics of care for dealing with social issues, the book shows how the ethics of care is more promising than other moral theories for advice on how limited or expansive markets should be, showing how values other than market ones should have priority in such activities as childcare, health care, education, and in cultural activities. Finally, the book connects the ethics of care with the rising interest in civil society, and with limits on what law and rights are thought able to accomplish. It shows the promise of the ethics of care for dealing with global problems and with efforts to foster international civility.

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Citations (1)


... It considers the development of what we call a-political corporate leadership -a form of leadership that attempts to bracket out corporate engagement with broader political issues, but which embodies a constant tension (signalled by the hyphen), in that such attempts to stay beyond politics themselves constitute political acts and involve political (ir)responsibilities. We see the opposing elements (leading politically by abdicating politics) of this tension as interrelated and 'mutually reproducing features' of the complex, dialectical dynamics of leadership (Collinson, 2005) and consider how they serve to sustain organisational and individual survival in a hostile and dangerous political context. Furthermore, we frame this tension as part of the dilemmas and paradoxes of caring leadership (Gabriel, 2015;Tomkins, 2020b), and the balance that needs to be maintained between the ethical considerations of care and justice (Fisher and Tronto, 1990;Tronto, 1993Tronto, , 2013Held, 2006;Tomkins, 2020a). To explore these considerations, we draw on care-ethical conceptualisations of care, which is seen as a relational concern for the needs of particular others and how our actions affect them, and justice, which is understood as a focus on fairness through abstract and impartial moral rules and principles Gilligan (1993). ...

Reference:

Business beyond politics? A-political corporate leadership in authoritarian Russia
Virginia Held: The Ethics of Care. Personal, Political, and Global
  • Citing Article
  • February 2006