Eva Feder Kittay is an American philosopher whose work on dependency and disability has deepened care ethics’ critique of liberal political theory. Her Love’s Labor: Essays on Women, Equality, and Dependency (1999) argues that the social contract tradition’s foundational assumption — free, equal, and independent persons choosing to enter political association — erases the dependency relations that structure all human life.

Core ideas

  • Nested dependencies: the caregiver who tends a dependent person is themselves made dependent by that work — dependent on resources, support, and recognition that are often withheld. Care creates chains of dependency that political theory must address.
  • Dependency critique of liberalism: the “independent” subject of contract theory is an ideological fiction sustained by invisible care work. Political theory built on this fiction cannot adequately represent those it claims to include.
  • Doulia: the principle that anyone who provides care for a dependent person is owed support in turn — that the labor of care creates obligations that extend beyond the immediate caring relationship.
  • Disability and justice: Kittay’s work, informed by her experience as the mother of a daughter with severe cognitive disabilities, insists that political theory must account for persons who will never achieve the “independence” that liberalism presupposes.

Notable works

  • Love’s Labor: Essays on Women, Equality, and Dependency (1999)
  • Learning from My Daughter: The Value and Care of Disabled Minds (2019)