•  25
    Philosophical inquiry into pregnancy, childbirth, and mothering is a growing area of interest to academic philosophers. This volume brings together a diverse group of philosophers to speak about topics in this reemerging area of philosophical inquiry, taking up new themes, such as maternal aesthetics, and pursuing old ones in new ways, such as investigating stepmothering as it might inform and ground an ethics of care. The theoretical foci of the book include feminist, existential, ethical, aest…Read more
  •  29
    Applying Care Ethics to Business (edited book)
    with Maurice Hamington
    Springer Verlag. 2010.
    Applying Care Ethics to Business is the first book-length analysis of business and economic cases and theories from the perspective of care theory.
  •  6
    Lactational Burkas and Milkmen
    In Fritz Allhoff & Sheila Lintott (eds.), Motherhood ‐ Philosophy for Everyone, Wiley‐blackwell. 2010-09-24.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Lactational Burkas, Lactational Burdens Breastfeeding as Obscene The Intimacy of Breastfeeding “Breast is Best” Milkmen Conclusion Notes.
  • Care Ethics, Religion, and Spiritual Traditions (edited book)
    with Inge van Nistelrooij and Maurice Hamington
    Peeters. 2022.
  • Ethics of Care Series-Vol. 13 book: Care Ethics, Religion, and Spiritual Traditions (edited book)
    with Inge van Nistelrooij and Maurice Hamington
  •  8
    The anthology, Feminist Bioethics, edited by Jackie Leach Scully, Laurel E. Baldwin-Ragaven, and Petya Fitzpatrick, examines how feminist bioethics theoretically and methodologically challenges mainstream bioethics, and whether these approaches are useful for exploring difference in other contexts. It offers critical conceptual analyses of "autonomy", "universality", and "trust", and covers topics such as testing for hereditary cancer, prenatal selection for sexual orientation, midwifery, public…Read more
  • Caring for Justice, Justifying Care: Toward Political Philosophy of Care
    Dissertation, University of Colorado at Boulder. 2002.
    This work draws out the moral significance of the care-ethic tradition by examining its implications for political theory. I defend the care tradition against the charge that it is a slave-morality because it is conceptually incapable of addressing political conflicts. I argue that a carefully drafted feminist version of care-ethics is capable of bridging this gap because it is conceptually able to highlight concerns of both justice and care simultaneously. A perspective combining the insights o…Read more
  •  25
    Care ethics
    In James Fieser & Bradley Dowden (eds.), Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, . 2011.
  •  25
    The proposal that care ethic be subsumed under the framework of virtue ethic is both promising and problematic for feminists. Although some attempts to construe care as a virtue are more commendable than others, they cannot duplicate a freestanding feminist CE. Sander-Staudt recommends a model of theoretical collaboration between VE and CE that retains their comprehensiveness, allows CE to enhance VE as well as be enhanced by it, and leaves CE open to other collaborations.
  •  88
    The anthology, Feminist Bioethics, edited by Jackie Leach Scully, Laurel E. Baldwin-Ragaven, and Petya Fitzpatrick, examines how feminist bioethics theoretically and methodologically challenges mainstream bioethics, and whether these approaches are useful for exploring difference in other contexts. It offers critical conceptual analyses of "autonomy", "universality", and "trust", and covers topics such as testing for hereditary cancer, prenatal selection for sexual orientation, midwifery, public…Read more
  •  20
    The proposal that care ethic be subsumed under the framework of virtue ethic is both promising and problematic for feminists. Although some attempts to construe care as a virtue are more commendable than others, they cannot duplicate a freestanding feminist CE. Sander-Staudt recommends a model of theoretical collaboration between VE and CE that retains their comprehensiveness, allows CE to enhance VE as well as be enhanced by it, and leaves CE open to other collaborations.
  •  366
    : The proposal that care ethic(s) (CE) be subsumed under the framework of virtue ethic(s) (VE) is both promising and problematic for feminists. Although some attempts to construe care as a virtue are more commendable than others, they cannot duplicate a freestanding feminist CE. Sander-Staudt recommends a model of theoretical collaboration between VE and CE that retains their comprehensiveness, allows CE to enhance VE as well as be enhanced by it, and leaves CE open to other collaborations