This article presents qualitative data collected during a project funded by the Economic and Social Research Council exploring 11 men's experience of first-time fatherhood. It draws specifically on data from interviews conducted after the birth of their child, to present three different ways that men attempt to construct 'fairness' in their fathering practice. It uses this data to begin to theorise the 'deliberative father', which is presented as a morally progressive form of fatherhood that focuses on process rather than practice. Three counter-arguments are considered, with particular attention paid to Reece's (2013) argument against thin conceptions of 'reflective' parenting. The article concludes that deliberative fatherhood is not morally progressive because the process of deliberation ensures morally optimal practice. Rather, it is morally progressive because the process of deliberation makes morally optimal practice possible.
CITATION STYLE
Ives, J. (2015). Theorising the “deliberative father”: Compromise, progress and striving to do fatherhood well. Families, Relationships and Societies, 4(2), 281–294. https://doi.org/10.1332/204674314X14184029517584
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.