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

Author(s)
Geiger, Susi  
Galasso, Ilaria  
Hangel, Nora  
Lucivero, Federica  
Watts, Gemma  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/25019
Date Issued
2023-10-23
Date Available
2023-11-23T16:51:14Z
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.
Sponsorship
European Commission Horizon 2020
European Research Council
Other Sponsorship
Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung
University of Oxford COVID-19 Research Response Fund
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Springer
Journal
Journal of Business Ethics
Volume
192
Start Page
441
End Page
459
Copyright (Published Version)
2023 The Authors
Subjects

Ethics of care

Consumption ethics

Shopping

Covid-19

Relational ethics

Response-ability

Solidarity

Crisis

DOI
10.1007/s10551-023-05541-7
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0167-4544
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ie/
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Geiger et al JBE accepted.pdf

Size

519.43 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

4a11c2e83f15e3f8671bb766c09e183d

Owning collection
Business Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
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