Détails du document

Impression et sauvegarde

Article de journal

The Home and the World: Domestic Service and International Networks of Caring Labor

Date

2001

Auteurs

Doreen J Mattingly

Résumé

The employment of immigrant domestic worker in a valuable entry point for examining the construction of class and racial-ethnic differences among women in a global economy. It also reveals the complex ways that social reproduction, like production, is shaped by international connections and flows. This article draws on interviews with thirty-two immigrant domestic workers and twenty-nine employers of domestic workers in San Diego to examine the organization of caring labor in the two sets of households. The interview data show that employers of domestic workers rely on paid service workers to supply additional labor, while domestic workers rely on the unpaid labor of family members. Neither group relies primarily on government support, although differences in citizenship status influence the strategies of the two groups. The article draws o the interviews to make two related points. First, it argues that social production has come, in some places, to involve networks that cross international borders. Second, it argues that the interrelated strategies he two group so f women use to access caring labor are informed by and contribute to class and racial-ethnic differences among women and their households, and that citizenship is of particular important in constructing and solidifying these differences.

Journal title

Annals of the Association of American Geographers

Volume

91

Numéro

2

Page numbers

370-386

Éditeur

Taylor & Francis, Ltd

Fichiers joints

Liens

Mots-clés

Domestic Workers, immigration, net-works, San Diego, social reproduction, working women

Secteurs économiques

Occupations in services - Domestic work

Types de contenu

Statistics on work and life conditions

Groupes cibles

Chercheurs

Pertinence géographique

États-Unis et México

Sphères d’activité

Études en genre et sexualité

Langues

Anglais