Research Group on the Study of Care, Values and the Future of Welfare (CAVA)

The research examines how far social changes, such as increases in divorce, changes in men and women's employment, different expectations of close relationships and cultural diversity have changed the contours of people's lives, and, in particular, the moral vocabulary underpinning the practices of care, intimacy and obligation. The aim is to investigate the changing moral ordering or parenting and partnering; to generate a new normative framework for future social policies in Britain. Background: The Beveridge welfare state was developed on the assumption that certain areas of life were relatively fixed and secure. This Research Group on Care, Values and the Future of Welfare(CAVA) ran from 1999 to 2006 and was a study of changes in parenting and partnering in Britain and their implications for future social policy. At the heart of the programme was an investigation into the values that people attach to their parenting and partnering activities. The core empirical projects focused on key aspects of change in family lives and personal relationships: (1) motherhood, care and employment; (2) kin relationships and divorce; (3) care and commitments in transnational families; (4) practices of care and intimacy amongst those who live in 'non-conventional' ways without a co-resident partner.

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Geographic Coverage:

United Kingdom

Temporal Coverage:

2001-01-01/2003-12-31

Resource Type:

dataset

Available in Data Catalogs:

UK Data Service

Topics: