Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/17209
Author(s): Lima, A. P.
Editor: Miriam grossi [et al.]
Date: 2018
Title: Care, support and solidarity among Portuguese families: intertwining mutuality, dependency and autonomy in times of crises
Volume: 1
Pages: 590 - 595
ISBN: 978-85-62946-96-7
Keywords: Care
Family
Austerity
Precarity
Abstract: After 3 decades of economic growth and significant improvement of social conditions, Portugal is now going through a profound social and economic crisis. Following the international financial crisis of 2008, Portugal signed four-year structural adjustment programme agreement with the ‘Troika’ (i.e. European Commission; European Central Bank; International Monetary Fund) in May 2011. Under a right-wing coalition government, the programme’s implementation was shaped by harsh tax increases, spending cuts, and reduction of welfare benefits. Similarly, to other countries on the indebted periphery of the Eurozone, the core of Portuguese policies of austerity centered on measures of internal devaluation mainly constituted by wage repression; employment precariousness, labour devaluation and mass unemployment – contributing to the most violent and rapid transfer of income from labour to capital in democratic Portugal (Reis et. al. 2013). The human and social costs of austerity measures were devastating. While increasingly larger sectors of the population see their living conditions deteriorate and become increasingly unstable. In order to face up to everyday basic needs, and given the welfare state’s collapse, citizens are resuming informal routes to provide for their daily needs, such as the support provided by interpersonal networks or non-governmental organizations. Public actions of social solidarity grow day by day, the personal stories of help received by friends, neighbours, relatives or mere acquaintances are commonly heard among almost all social groups (young people, old people, poor classes, middle classes…) I will discuss some of these different dimensions of care using a broad notion of concept - one that can tackle the multiple ways of helping and support to ensure that needs are met, - and building on ethnographic work done among middle class families in Lisbon and Oporto between 2012 and 2015, I will argue (i) that provision of care, such as it has become in the present situation, takes on a central role in the processes of everyday livelihood, in national economy, and (ii) that these informal strategies are effective means of survival in a context of crisis. Confronted with increasing shortcomings in the state care system, people return to informal ways of making ends meet. Actions borne out of personal initiative, imbued of the morality of “care” and the common good, have become frequent making life possible in moments of crisis.
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:CRIA-CRI - Comunicações a conferências internacionais

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