1st Edition

Geographies of Care Space, Place and the Voluntary Sector

By Christine Milligan Copyright 2001
    302 Pages
    by Routledge

    302 Pages
    by Routledge

    This title was first published in 2001. As care services in Britain have moved from institutional to community-based environments, there has been a simultaneous shift in those agencies concerned with the provision of such care and support. this new environment of care is a complex one, involving numerous different actors and agencies that operate across various different spatial and organizational levels of the policy process. The implementation and success of care policies depend in part on the inter-relationships between these various players. This book examines these inter-relationships, illustrated by an in-depth empirical study of policy makers and informal care providers concerned with the frail elderly in Scotland. Taking the voluntary sector as a lens through which these inter-relationships are explored, it analyzes how voluntary support is affected by differing local contexts of care and what this means in terms of locally based care outcomes.

    1: Introduction; 2: Geographical Perspectives on Health; 3: Policy and Place: An Historical Geography of Caring; 4: Constructing the Conceptual Framework; 5: Landscapes of Care: Issues of Design and Implementation; 6: A Geography of Care Restructuring: The Voluntary Experience; 7: Exploring Geographies of Informal Caring; 8: The Private Sector and a Privatised Geography of Caring; 9: Statutory Influences on the Geography of Caring; 10: A Geography of Care; 11: Conclusion; 12: Epilogue

    Biography

    Christine Milligan