AbebeT (2013) Interdependent rights and agency: The role of children in collective livelihood strategies in rural Ethiopia. In: HansonKNieuwenhuysO (eds) Reconceptualizing Children’s Rights in International Development. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp.71–92.
BalagopalanS (2021) The politics of deferral: Denaturalizing the ‘economic value’ of children’s labor in India. Current Sociology. Epub ahead of print 23 February 2021. DOI: 10.1177/0011392120985865.
6.
BerlantL (2011) Cruel Optimism. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
7.
BerlantL (2016) The commons: Infrastructures for troubling times. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space34(3): 393–419.
8.
DeardenCBeckerS (2000) Growing Up Caring: Vulnerability and Transition to Adulthood—Young Careers’ Experiences. Leicester: National Youth Agency.
9.
De La BellacasaMP (2012) “Nothing comes without its world”: Thinking with care. Sociological Review60(2): 197–216.
10.
DesaiK (2020) Life skills as affective labour: Skilling girls with gendered enterprise. South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies43(4): 705–722.
11.
EvansR (2014) Children as caregivers. In: Ben-AriehACasasFFronesI, et al. (eds) Handbook of Child Well-Being. Heidelberg: Springer.
12.
EvansRBeckerS (2009) Children Caring for Parents with HIV and AIDS: Global Issues and Policy Responses. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
13.
EvansRBowlbySGottzénL, et al. (2019) Unpacking ‘family troubles’, care and relationality across time and space. Children’s Geographies17(5): 501–513.
14.
FraserN (2017) Crisis of care? On the social-reproductive contradictions of contemporary capitalism. In: BhattacharyaT (ed.) Social Reproduction Theory. London: Pluto Press, pp.21–36.
15.
Garcia-SanchezI (2018) Youth as interactional brokers of care. Annual Review of Anthropology47: 167–184.
16.
Gillian-PetersonJ (2015) The value of the future: The child as human capital and the neoliberal labor of race. Women’s Studies Quarterly43(1/2): 181–196.
17.
GraeberD (2011) Debt: The First 5000 Years. Brooklyn, NY and London: Melville House Publishing.
18.
HanC (2018) Precarity, precariousness and vulnerability. Annual Review of Anthropology47: 331–343.
19.
HansonKNieuwenhuysO (2013) Reconceptualizing Children’s Rights in International Development. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
20.
HortenJPyerM (eds) (2017) Children, Young People and Care. London: Routledge.
21.
HuijismansRAnsellNFroererP (2021) Introduction: Development, young people and the social production of aspirations. European Journal of Development Research33: 1–15.
22.
HunlethJ (2017) Children as Caregivers: The Global Fight against Tuberculosis and HIV in Zambia. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
23.
KatzC (2010) Accumulation, excess, childhood: Towards a counter topography of risk and waste. Documents d’anàlisi geogràfica57(1): 47–60.
24.
KelzR (2016) The Non-Sovereign Self, Responsibility and Otherness: Hannah Arendt, Judith Butler and Stanley Cavell on Moral Philosophy and Political Agency. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
25.
LuttrellW (2013) Children’s counter-narratives of care: Towards educational justice. Children and Society27(4): 295–308.
26.
MaithreyiR (2019) Children’s reconstruction of psychological knowledge: An ethnographic study of life skills education programmes in India. Childhood26(1): 68–82.
27.
MaitraSMaitraS (2018) Producing the aesthetic self: An analysis of aesthetic skill and labour in the organized retail industries in India. Journal of South Asian Development139(3): 337–357.
28.
NewberryJRosenR (2020) Women and children together and apart: Finding the time for social reproduction theory. Focaal: Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology86: 112–120.
29.
NoxoloPRaghuramPMadgeC (2012) Unsettling responsibility: Postcolonial interventions. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers37(3): 418–429.
30.
OchsEIzquierdoC (2009) Responsibility in childhood: Three developmental trajectories. Ethos37(4): 391–413.
31.
OksalaJ (2016) Affective labor and feminist politics. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society41(21): 281–303.
32.
OrellanaM (2009) Translating Childhoods: Immigrant Youth, Language and Culture. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
33.
PalaciosL (2016) Challenging convictions: Indigenous and black race-radical feminists theorizing the carceral state and abolitionist praxis in the United States and Canada. Meridians: Feminism, Race, Transnationalism15(1): 137–165.
34.
RegeS (1998) Dalit women talk differently: A critique of ‘difference’ and towards a Dalit feminist standpoint position. Economic and Political Weekly33(44): WS39–WS46.
35.
Ribbens McCarthyJGilliesV (2018) Troubling children’s families: Who’s troubled and why? Approaches to inter-cultural dialogue. Sociological Research Online23(1): 219–244.
36.
SilverL (2020) Transformative childhood studies—A remix in inquiry, justice, and love. Children’s Geographies18: 176–190.
37.
SpivakG (2004) Righting wrongs. South Atlantic Quarterly103: 523–581.
TaylorAPacini-KetchabawV (2018) The Common Worlds of Children and Animals: Relational Ethics for Entangled Lives. London: Routledge.
40.
ThompsonA (2004) Caring and colortalk: Childhood innocence in White and Black. In: SnareyJWalkerV (eds) Race-ing Moral Formations: African American Perspectives on Care and Justice. New York: Teacher’s College Press, pp.23–37.
41.
TrontoJ (1993) Moral Boundaries: A Political Argument for an Ethic of Care. New York: Routledge.
42.
WellsK (2011) The politics of life: Governing childhood. Global Studies of Childhood1(1): 15–25.
43.
YarrisK (2017) Care across Generations: Solidarity and Sacrifice in Transnational Families. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.