Citizenship as Distributed Achievements: Shaping New Conditions for an Everyday Life with Dementia
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/12510Date
2018-02-01Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Citizenship for people with a disability has become a notable subject within disability studies, but
dementia has only sparingly been included in these studies. However, an important international debate
on citizenship for people with dementia is emerging, highlighting rights, empowerment, agency, and new
socio-political understandings. Yet, even though these studies often entail a relational understanding, they
tend to perceive citizenship as allocated statically to individuals. This article contributes to the debate
by conceptualizing relational citizenship as the distributed achievements of care-collectives consisting
of a complex set of socio-material agents, including the person with dementia and the disease. Rather
than adding more knowledge about experiences of dementia, the article develops an understanding of
the critical mechanisms producing citizenship for all, and of care-collectives as potential facilitators
for such distributed achievements. The results indicate that citizenship is a malleable and precarious
enactment that needs continuous nourishment to be maintained, and that localized knowledge about the
emergence and development of care-collectives is crucial for this maintenance and, hence, for shaping
decent conditions for an everyday life with dementia.
Description
Source at: http://doi.org/10.16993/sjdr.35 , licensed CC-BY 4.0.