'I Don’t Have the Nerve to Tell These People That I Cannot Help Them!': Vulnerability, Ethnography, and Good Intentions
Autor: | Catela, Joana |
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Přispěvatelé: | Repositório da Universidade de Lisboa |
Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Austerity
Public housing media_common.quotation_subject vulnerability Vulnerability social housing Context (language use) 0502 economics and business Ethnography Institution medical anthropology 0601 history and archaeology Sociology Medical anthropology Legal instrument Social suffering media_common 060101 anthropology business.industry 05 social sciences Social housing General Social Sciences 06 humanities and the arts Public relations Good intentions austerity social suffering good intentions business 050203 business & management |
Zdroj: | Societies Volume 9 Issue 4 Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (RCAAP) instacron:RCAAP |
ISSN: | 2075-4698 |
DOI: | 10.3390/soc9040084 |
Popis: | The nonprofit organization where this ethnography took place, driven by the maxim ”lending a hand”, was forced to reduce its efforts to what it considered essential, at a time when austerity was beginning to take shape in Portugal. The analysis of the logics employed to distribute food to the neediest proved to be critical to the understanding of the consequences of apparent beneficial actions in this context. The concept of ”vulnerable” is, therefore, discussed considering how it was produced by a legal instrument and how it was reproduced by a local institution, what were the consequences for the subjects involved in this research and also for the vulnerable ethnographer. This investigation was based on several months of intense fieldwork where different ethnographic methodologies were employed in order to grasp the complexities of vulnerability and good intentions, such as participants’ observations and semi-directive interviews. Although this paper focuses on the analysis of the distribution of food support during a later visit to the fieldwork site, it is not the purpose of this paper to discuss issues of food shortage, but to contribute to the debate of care in the context of deprivation and precariousness, anchored in an ethnography where these concepts intertwine with real situations. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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