Abstract
<p> This interdisciplinary anthology offers readers a rich insight into the normatively tense relationship between care as experience and as practice on the one hand, and social inequality on the other. Contributions from theology, sociology, philosophy, and development research present a series of empirically saturated case studies in which care deals with social inequality, alleviates, overcomes, reproduces, or fails because of inequality. The diversity of the critical-analytical case studies thereby allows for a comparative view that counteracts prejudices along certain care paradigms. The book is thus of especial interest for researchers and students from the humanities and social sciences, as well as for practitioners working in care professions. <bold>With contributions by</bold> Johannes Frederik Burow | Johannes Ebbertz | Elis Eichener | Henk Jasper van Gils-Schmidt | Mareike Sophie Hoffmann | Anna Henkel | Isolde Karle | Gesa Lindemann | Jan von Schmettow | Micha H. Werner </p>