I mentioned yesterday the issues we have encountered on social media when using the phrase the politics of care to describe the thinking I have been developing on this blog.
It seems that people, and so social media, have either got bored with talking about care, or they associate it with low-quality, overly optimistic, insincere social-media commentary that they do not wish to read. As a result, YouTube, most definitely, does not push such material. As a consequence, we need to find another term to describe this thinking if it is going to travel as we wish across social media platforms.
The team here has put quite a lot of thought into this over a relatively short period, using the bottom-up, open discussion framework we have used in the past for tasks such as creating book titles. The difference on this occasion was that James and Thomas joined Jacqueline and me when undertaking the process.
The one thing I can say about discussion in our household is that if an idea does not pass muster, whoever promoted it soon discovers why. Debate is always fast and respectful, but it is dismissive of any ideas that fail to meet an agreed goal, which allows very rapid progress in idea development.
During these discussions, it quickly became clear that we had several objectives, which are important to understand to contextualise the posts that will follow this one.
The first was that we wanted to be as positive as possible. In other words, the description we sought had to state what we are for without further explanation being required. We think that is vital to successful political campaigning, which is what we are engaged in, albeit without party allegiance. In that case, anything that does not precisely describe what we want to achieve will not do.
That said, and secondly, we are also aware that we are opposing neoliberalism and its obvious destination, which is fascism. Recognising this, we do, however, want to depersonalise that opposition to the greatest degree possible. We oppose the behaviours, choices, and consequences associated with these ideologies, but not the people who hold them. This is essential if we are to change minds. Alienating opponents can never help achieve that goal. As such, we were keen to find a term that might replace neoliberalism in our narratives, given that the word is neither well-known or understood.
Thirdly, before any idea was considered acceptable, we needed to frame it within its potential setting when in use, and most particularly in the context of debate, to make sure that what we were putting forward was a positive idea, and that what any opponent might suggest in response could be shown to be negative without making that accusation personal, class-based, or ideological. The aim was to describe failed behaviour, because that is the framing we think the vast majority of people, most of whom are not politically aligned, will relate to best.
Fourthly, all that being said, we also wanted to continue using the terms politics of care, economics of care, and, perhaps most appropriately, the political economy of care, which, unlike the economics of care, emphasises that care is always chosen behaviour. We therefore wanted to weave these within the narratives we sought to create.
In summary, we sought a headline phrase that allows us to be positive while also creating narratives of disagreement which are not personal but are, instead, descriptive of behaviour, without leaving the concept of care behind or replacing it with any narrative based on blame, because that is potentially alienating and, within this political sphere, we do not think this benefits anyone. That was a tall order.
Over the posts that will follow, you will see how we got on.
Thanks for reading this post.
You can share this post on social media of your choice by clicking these icons:
There are links to this blog's glossary in the above post that explain technical terms used in it. Follow them for more explanations.
You can subscribe to this blog's daily email here.
And if you would like to support this blog you can, here:

Buy me a coffee!

Following on from previous post re our shared biology- amygdala threat response system ….and FTF thoughts would the word courage cut through? It hints at threat as why would courage be needed except in a context of threat?
Courage is positive and arguably needed to challenge hegemony in dangerous anti democratic times
What we see is the politics of cowardice and courage is the antidote.
Noted
Challenge is a good word- rejection of the status quo and “positive challenge’ in the penultimate sentence implies there is an alternative. But it needs more work.
The term neo-liberal is I find, sometimes a barrier. People are often not sure what it means or equate it with liberal as in centre-left.
I admit I don’t have a answer.
The answer on neoliberalism is being worked on – probably tomorrow now. There is a lot of recording today.
[…] continue the story of the narrative we are developing to explain the politics of care in a way that is easier for people to comprehend, […]
[…] far this morning, I have explained the background to our new thinking and have introduced the term Politics for People, which we plan to use as an overarching […]
Surely the answer to this lies in quantum mechanics and concepts like entropy? I would be minded to base your solutions from there? Essentially, have you not always advocated controlling the chaos in economic systems? Because of the hurt chaos does to people and the planet? It is of course, easy enough for me to suggest………but?
You are right
Connects well with Tim Jackson’s ‘The Care Economy’.
Although that book did not set the world alight.