Abstract
AbstractExamining the “world's largest cash-based social policy” through the lens of care reveals widely shared scalar imaginaries and the productivity of care in constituting scale. In standardizing the minimum livelihood guarantee (dibao), officials, applicants and researchers in rural Sichuan cited both “too much” and “not enough” care at the scale of the family in recommending or rejecting state assistance. Different levels of organization (scale1) were not stable bases with specific sizes and qualities (scale2) that enabled or limited care.Dibao-related practices were evaluated as an appropriate (“filial piety”), insufficient (“individualism”) or excessive (“corruption”) amount of family care. Care became an indicator of kinship measurements and a marker of state boundaries. Thus, scale (in both meanings) was enacted in China, as elsewhere, through negotiations of needs and responsibilities, through evaluations of care practices and their outcomes. In this sense, care scales.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Development,Geography, Planning and Development
Reference43 articles.
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2. Sichuan sheng nongcun jumin zuidi shenghuo baozhang banfa;Procedures for the rural minimum livelihood guarantee in Sichuan province,2009
3. Qiangdiao zili ziqiang: yingdui dibao fulihua” (Stressing self-sufficiency and self-improvement: confronting the welfarization of the minimum livelihood guarantee);Wang;Zhongguo jingji shibao,2017
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