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Yvette Maker is a Senior Research Associate at the University of Melbourne's Social Equity Institute and the Centre for AI and Digital Ethics. She holds qualifications in Law, Arts (Psychology) and Social and Political Sciences. Prior to embarking on an academic career, Yvette worked in research and policy roles in non-profit and government bodies and has provided research support to the Chair of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. With Bernadette McSherry she edited Restrictive Practices in Health Care and Disability Settings: Legal, Policy and Practical Responses (2021).
Introduction; Part I. Care Policy Tensions: 1. A feminist dilemma: support
unpaid care or support paid work?; 2. The universal caregiver model:
expanding options or imposing new limits?; 3. Disability rights and carers'
advocacy: to reject or to recognize care; 4. A disability rights informed
ethics of care: interdependence and common humanity; Part II. Balancing
Competing Claims through Rights-Based Policy: 5. A new framework for
designing rights-based care and support policy; Part III. Care and Support
Policy Tensions in Two Liberal Welfare States: 6. Income support for carers
of children with disabilities in Australia: background and recent reforms
to carer payment; 7. Care, disability, and gender equality in carers'
income support: narrow choices and unheard voices; 8. Incorporating
multiple options and perspectives: applying the care and support rights
principles to carer payment; 9. Care and support for adults in England:
background and the recent Care Act reform; 10. Care, disability, and gender
equality in English care and support policy: well-being for all with
resources for a few?; 11. Maximizing options and opportunities: aligning
the Care Act with the care and support rights principle; Conclusions.