The Vulnerability and Injustices Faced by Young Carers in Developed Societies

Around 2–8% of children and adolescents in developed societies are young carers, who provide care for ill, disabled, or addicted family members. This paper investigates the vulnerability and multidimensional injustices faced by young carers, drawing on empirical studies—both qualitative and quantita...

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Main Author: Gottfried Schweiger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-04-01
Series:Societies
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/15/4/101
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author Gottfried Schweiger
author_facet Gottfried Schweiger
author_sort Gottfried Schweiger
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description Around 2–8% of children and adolescents in developed societies are young carers, who provide care for ill, disabled, or addicted family members. This paper investigates the vulnerability and multidimensional injustices faced by young carers, drawing on empirical studies—both qualitative and quantitative—and social theory to reveal how young carers navigate their roles within the broader context of social inequality, highlighting the social structures and mechanisms that contribute to their marginalization and the detrimental consequences for their social inclusion, well-being, and personal development. The methodology of this article is a narrative analysis of relevant empirical research on young carers, combined with an analysis of this literature through a normative framework of social justice, which examines four dimensions of justice in order to highlight the vulnerability of young carers. (1) Firstly, young carers are often pushed into their situation because of economic and social constraints, which do not allow the family to find a different solution. Economic inequalities lead to and enforce caring obligations and have a cumulative negative effect on the young carer. Limited resources can be problematic for social inclusion, and when combined with caring obligations, they are corrosive. (2) Secondly, young carers are often victims of moral blackmail, which is that they are trapped in a situation where it would be morally wrong for them to act otherwise. Such moral blackmail can be carried out by those who are cared for, by the family and relatives or even by society, which could, but does not provide alternatives to young carers. (3) Thirdly, young carers are often manipulated to accept their caring obligations through distorted social norms and practices. Other than in the case of moral blackmail, such young carers do not care because they want to do the morally right thing and do have no alternatives available, but because they internalized that it would be normal for them to do so. Two concepts are useful to capture this aspect: adaptive preferences and indoctrination. (4) Fourthly, young people caring is often a form of exploitation, in that it takes unfair advantage of the young carer by receiving something from them, without giving an equivalent in return (and harming them in the process).
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spelling doaj-art-3523e11aee64412c892c9f32bbf887d62025-08-20T03:13:54ZengMDPI AGSocieties2075-46982025-04-0115410110.3390/soc15040101The Vulnerability and Injustices Faced by Young Carers in Developed SocietiesGottfried Schweiger0Centre for Ethics and Poverty Research, University of Salzburg, 5020 Salzburg, AustriaAround 2–8% of children and adolescents in developed societies are young carers, who provide care for ill, disabled, or addicted family members. This paper investigates the vulnerability and multidimensional injustices faced by young carers, drawing on empirical studies—both qualitative and quantitative—and social theory to reveal how young carers navigate their roles within the broader context of social inequality, highlighting the social structures and mechanisms that contribute to their marginalization and the detrimental consequences for their social inclusion, well-being, and personal development. The methodology of this article is a narrative analysis of relevant empirical research on young carers, combined with an analysis of this literature through a normative framework of social justice, which examines four dimensions of justice in order to highlight the vulnerability of young carers. (1) Firstly, young carers are often pushed into their situation because of economic and social constraints, which do not allow the family to find a different solution. Economic inequalities lead to and enforce caring obligations and have a cumulative negative effect on the young carer. Limited resources can be problematic for social inclusion, and when combined with caring obligations, they are corrosive. (2) Secondly, young carers are often victims of moral blackmail, which is that they are trapped in a situation where it would be morally wrong for them to act otherwise. Such moral blackmail can be carried out by those who are cared for, by the family and relatives or even by society, which could, but does not provide alternatives to young carers. (3) Thirdly, young carers are often manipulated to accept their caring obligations through distorted social norms and practices. Other than in the case of moral blackmail, such young carers do not care because they want to do the morally right thing and do have no alternatives available, but because they internalized that it would be normal for them to do so. Two concepts are useful to capture this aspect: adaptive preferences and indoctrination. (4) Fourthly, young people caring is often a form of exploitation, in that it takes unfair advantage of the young carer by receiving something from them, without giving an equivalent in return (and harming them in the process).https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/15/4/101young carersvulnerabilitysocial justicemoral coercionsocial inequalitystructural exploitation
spellingShingle Gottfried Schweiger
The Vulnerability and Injustices Faced by Young Carers in Developed Societies
Societies
young carers
vulnerability
social justice
moral coercion
social inequality
structural exploitation
title The Vulnerability and Injustices Faced by Young Carers in Developed Societies
title_full The Vulnerability and Injustices Faced by Young Carers in Developed Societies
title_fullStr The Vulnerability and Injustices Faced by Young Carers in Developed Societies
title_full_unstemmed The Vulnerability and Injustices Faced by Young Carers in Developed Societies
title_short The Vulnerability and Injustices Faced by Young Carers in Developed Societies
title_sort vulnerability and injustices faced by young carers in developed societies
topic young carers
vulnerability
social justice
moral coercion
social inequality
structural exploitation
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/15/4/101
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