We are excited to announce that the Hub will be holding the two-day hybrid Gender in an Age of Global Care Crisis conference in 2024.
Dates: Thursday 21 March, 9:00am - Friday 22 March 13:00pm (UK Time)
Venue: The Nissan Institute Lecture Theatre, St. Antony's College
Keynote Speakers
'Care and Migration' by Professor Rhacel Salazar Parreñas, Doris Stevens Chair and Professor of Sociology and Gender and Sexuality Studies, Princeton University.
This talk provides a global overview on the legal incorporation of migrant domestic workers. It establishes their precarious status as bound laborers, that is workers who are bound to the sole-employment by a sponsor, and the marginalities engendered by this status. The talk empirically focuses on the situation of migrant domestic workers in Arab States as this is the largest destination for these workers globally.
'Catastrophe and Caring' by Professor Sharmila Rudrappa, Sociology and South Asia Institute (Director), University of Texas at Austin.
This talk will build on formative scholarship to suggest that theorizations of care need to move beyond the human worlds to consider non-human life— plants, annelidan worms, water, fungi. Rather than public-private interventions, state policies, or international agreements to mitigate climate change, asking what it might be to expand caring labour to include non-human lives to imagine reparative futures for damaged societies living on a damaged planet.
For online participants there is a registration fee of £30.00 (Zoom details will be provided upon registration)
For in-person participants there is a registration fee of £100.00. This fee includes entry to the conference and tea/coffee during the breaks and a buffet lunch on both days of the conference.
You can access a list of budget accommodation options in Oxford here.
You can purchase tickets here
For enquires please contact: gendercarehub@area.ox.ac.uk
The Hub is the result of the teamwork of 35 members based in OSGA, in seven other departments in Oxford, overseas as well as practitioners in international organizations, NGOs, and business. The Hub is funded by the John Fell Oxford University Press Research Fund.