What we really need is a cure for ableism.
When we allow death to happen, we are not killing people, we are caring for them.
The realities of care-giving belie the assumption that male refugees, especially those from Muslim backgrounds, pose an inherent threat to Europe.
Both policy reforms and face-to-face caring are fundamental components of a just society.
Disability isn’t a deficit within a person, it’s a deficit in a culture that doesn’t accept or enable a person for who they are.
Indigenous women are taking back their power as life-givers.
Outrage over child abuse is no substitute for effective social policy.
A unique affordable-housing community supports both foster families and elders who might be looking for a few extra grandchildren.
Women carers are still fighting for the right to not be impoverished, overworked, isolated, or exploited in their work.
With neither past nor future in common, what do relationships that exist entirely in the present have to offer? (video: 5 minutes)
From funeral cooperatives to green burials, there's a kinder, gentler, less expensive way to die.
Might pain and oppression be like love—a simple thunderbolt at times, and in other circumstances complex and slow burning over generations?