Oxford Events, the new replacement for OxTalks, will launch on 16th March. From now until the launch of Oxford Events, new events cannot be published or edited on OxTalks while all existing records are migrated to the new platform. The existing OxTalks site will remain available to view during this period.
From 16th, Oxford Events will launch on a new website: events.ox.ac.uk, and event submissions will resume. You will need a Halo login to submit events. Full details are available on the Staff Gateway.
In this lecture Shirin Rai will examine the human costs of care and caring and how these are reproduced across the boundaries of class, race and gender as well as across generations. She will explore the multiple facets of social reproductive work and how its undervaluing is not just a theoretical gap in our knowledge, but a cost to those who perform this work, which she calls ‘depletion through social reproduction’. She will argue that if unrecognized, depletion erodes individual lives as well as social institutions (family, community groups and our ecologies), which is generative of harm. Inequalities of race, gender and class are critical in the understanding of depletion as are human and non-human costs in different contexts. She will show how depletion is both a contributing factor and an outcome of economic, environmental, health and social crises; the resilience of those who care, however, makes them the shock absorbers of these crises. Reversal of depletion take different and complex forms – mitigation, replenishment and transformation. The struggles to reverse depletion are struggles for a good life.
Booking is required for people outside of the Department of Social Policy and Intervention (DSPI).
DSPI Members do not need to register.