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Articles

Caring about independent lives

Pages 241-252 | Received 13 Jan 2009, Accepted 19 Jun 2009, Published online: 05 Mar 2010
 

Abstract

With the rhetoric of independence, new cash for care systems were introduced in many developed welfare states at the end of the 20th century. These systems allow local authorities to pay people who are eligible for community care services directly, to enable them to employ their own careworkers. Despite the obvious importance of the careworker’s perceptions of a welfare system aimed at independence for disabled people, this perspective is under‐researched. This article explores this perspective by outlining three examples of careworker strategies (a continuing carer biography, searching for new horizons and acting pragmatically) identified in a cross‐national case study of cash for care in the UK and Norway. The strategies are mainly derived by considering different positions in the labour market and different ways of carrying out this carework. Overall, the paper intends to contribute to the understanding of the complex welfare dilemma between user independence and the nature of carework.

Acknowledgements

I would like to thank Doria Pilling and Robyn Johnson, City University, London, for helpful comments on the manuscript.

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