Click the star to add/remove an item to/from your individual schedule.
You need to be logged in to avail of this functionality.

E1


Technological innovations in caring communities: New solidarities 
Convenors:
Dick Willems (Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam)
Daniel Lopez Gomez (Universitat Oberta de Catalunya)
Christine Milligan (Lancaster Univeristy)
Jeannette Pols
Miquel Domènech (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
Send message to Convenors
Theme:
Health, caring, technology
Location:
C. Humanisticum AB 2.09
Sessions:
Thursday 18 September, -, -, Friday 19 September, -
Time zone: Europe/Warsaw

Long Abstract:

Solutions to the problems of an aging Europe are often sought in the development of new technologies to support individuals to care for themselves. Technological innovations are, however, always also social innovations: they entail the emergence (or the decline) of particular communities that can be recognized by their specific aesthetic-socio-technological forms that present new forms of solidarity.

Care innovations, such as web-based care, connect people (patients, citizens, informal carers, professionals) and technologies in new ways. Pilot studies into a caring community of people with a chronic disease (COPD) and partners of people with dementia, showed that unexpected new relationships emerge between people outside family networks, creating new forms of solidarity through shared moral values or common aesthetic appreciations of the good life.

In this EASST-track we want to convene researchers studying the link between technological innovation and the emergence of new forms and networks of solidarity, or their decline. We particularly invite contributions focusing on the aesthetic values such as styles and appreciations that cement communities and solidarities. For comparative purposes, contributions not related to care technologies as such are also specifically invited.

Examples of questions for this track: how do caring communities work? What keeps them together or makes them fall apart? What type of solidarity or ways of relating to one another emerge around technological innovation? How may shared aesthetics keep caring communities together?

The papers will be presented in the order shown and grouped 3-4-3 between sessions

Accepted papers:

Session 1 Thursday 18 September, 2014, -