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michelepaule | The Neoliberal Life Cycle of Success: Alternative Perspectives
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The Neoliberal Life Cycle of Success: Alternative Perspectives. Constructing Death as a Form of Failure: Addressing Mortality in a Neoliberal Age. June 18, 2015. Seminar slides: Death and Failure. Precarious Labor and Suspended Subjectivities: A Critical Examination of “Successful Aging” in Japan. May 21, 2015. May 21, 2015. Senior Lecturer in Anthropology. Care homes are scrap piles! One effect of this is that demand for care services far exceeds their current capacity. There are just too many insur...
nottheneoliberallifecycle.wordpress.com
May | 2015 | The Neoliberal Life Cycle of Success: Alternative Perspectives
https://nottheneoliberallifecycle.wordpress.com/2015/05
The Neoliberal Life Cycle of Success: Alternative Perspectives. Precarious Labor and Suspended Subjectivities: A Critical Examination of “Successful Aging” in Japan. May 21, 2015. May 21, 2015. Senior Lecturer in Anthropology. Care homes are scrap piles! One effect of this is that demand for care services far exceeds their current capacity. There are just too many insurance beneficiaries and too few care service workers (by 2025, the shortfall in care workers is expected to exceed 300,000 nationwide ...
nottheneoliberallifecycle.wordpress.com
Precarious Labor and Suspended Subjectivities: A Critical Examination of “Successful Aging” in Japan | The Neoliberal Life Cycle of Success: Alternative Perspectives
https://nottheneoliberallifecycle.wordpress.com/2015/05/21/precarious-labor-and-suspended-subjectivities-a-critical-examination-of-successful-aging-in-japan
The Neoliberal Life Cycle of Success: Alternative Perspectives. Precarious Labor and Suspended Subjectivities: A Critical Examination of “Successful Aging” in Japan. May 21, 2015. May 21, 2015. Senior Lecturer in Anthropology. Care homes are scrap piles! One effect of this is that demand for care services far exceeds their current capacity. There are just too many insurance beneficiaries and too few care service workers (by 2025, the shortfall in care workers is expected to exceed 300,000 nationwide ...