Asset or Burden: The Ethical Calculus of Care in Ulaanbaatar’s Urban Margins Cover Image

Asset or Burden: The Ethical Calculus of Care in Ulaanbaatar’s Urban Margins
Asset or Burden: The Ethical Calculus of Care in Ulaanbaatar’s Urban Margins

Author(s): Rebecca Empson, Elizabeth Fox
Subject(s): Anthropology, Cultural Anthropology / Ethnology
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Keywords: care; ethics; female breadwinners; interiority and exteriority; urban living; rural-urban migration; state; economy; home; pensions

Summary/Abstract: How do family relations change in the move from rural to urban living? What are the impacts of ur­banisation on the domestic? Drawing on the ethnography of two families on the outskirts of Mongo­lia’s capital, Ulaanbaatar, this chapter tackles the intersections of urbanisation and intergenerational care, charting the effects of rural-urban migration on family lives. Although their family structures differ, Tuya and Duya each find themselves shouldering the burden of being urban female breadwin­ners. To navigate conditions of profound economic precarity, they approach their families through a lens of economic-cum-moral strategizing, which we term a form of ‘ethical calculus’. In the city, money becomes synonymous with care and family members are categorised according to a scale of asset-to-burden based on their capacity to support or increase the breadwinner’s load. A focus on the work involved in such forms of care reveals a qualitatively different approach to family ties in ur­ban Mongolia that pulls people in two directions. The first is the reconfiguration of marginal popu­lations’ relationship with the state to one that equates care with money. The second is the atomising pressure that life on Ulaanbaatar’s margins puts on the hopes and capacities of household members.

  • Issue Year: 49/2021
  • Issue No: 1-2
  • Page Range: 85-101
  • Page Count: 17
  • Language: English
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