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Exploring the performance by immigrants of domestic and care work
in European households, this book places the employer centre-stage,
examining the role of the employer and his or her agents in
securing the balance between work, family and welfare needs, as
well as investigating both who the employers are and the nature of
their relationships with migrant workers. With attention to the
dynamics of inequality, as class, ethnicity and gender become
intertwined in a location that is at once home and workplace, this
volume is organised into sections that deal with the subjectivities
of employers and their relationships with their employees in the
home; the re-organisation of welfare and care arrangements at state
level; and the wider area of migrant domestic and care work, with
the transformation of the au pair scheme. Bringing together the
latest empirical work from across Europe, Employers, Agencies and
Immigration will appeal to social scientists with interests in
migration, ethnic and class relations, immigrant labour and
domestic work and the sociology of the family.
Exploring the performance by immigrants of domestic and care work
in European households, this book places the employer centre-stage,
examining the role of the employer and his or her agents in
securing the balance between work, family and welfare needs, as
well as investigating both who the employers are and the nature of
their relationships with migrant workers. With attention to the
dynamics of inequality, as class, ethnicity and gender become
intertwined in a location that is at once home and workplace, this
volume is organised into sections that deal with the subjectivities
of employers and their relationships with their employees in the
home; the re-organisation of welfare and care arrangements at state
level; and the wider area of migrant domestic and care work, with
the transformation of the au pair scheme. Bringing together the
latest empirical work from across Europe, Employers, Agencies and
Immigration will appeal to social scientists with interests in
migration, ethnic and class relations, immigrant labour and
domestic work and the sociology of the family.
EPDF and EPUB available Open Access under CC-BY-NC licence. Drawing
from the EU-funded DomEQUAL research project across 9 countries in
Europe, South America and Asia, this comparative study explores the
conditions of domestic workers around the world and the campaigns
they are conducting to improve their labour rights. The book
showcases how domestic workers' movements put 'intersectionality in
action' in representing the interest of various marginalized social
groups from migrants and low-income groups to racialized and rural
girls and women. Casting light on issues such as subjectification,
and collective organizing on the part of a category of workers
conventionally regarded as unorganizable, this ambitious volume
will be invaluable for scholars, policy makers and activists alike.
This open access short reader offers a systematic overview of the
scholarly debate on the experiences of migrant domestic workers at
a global level, in the past as well as in present time. It tackles
the nexus between migration and domestic work with a multi-layered
approach. The book looks into the issue of (paid) domestic work in
migratory contexts by investigating the feminization of migration,
thereby considering the larger framework within which this specific
phenomenon takes place. The author explains notions such as the
"international division of reproductive labor" or "global care
chains" which emphasize the inequality in the way care and domestic
tasks are distributed today between middle-class women in receiving
nations and migrant domestic workers. Moreover, the book shows how
women migrating to work in the domestic work and private care
sector are facing a complex landscape of migration and labor
regulations that are extremely difficult to navigate. At the same
time, this issue also addresses employers' households who cannot
find appropriate or affordable care among declining welfare states
and national workers reluctant to take the job, whilst legal
regulations make difficult to hire a domestic worker who is a third
country national. As such this book offers an interesting read to
academics, policy makers and all those working in the field.
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