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Domestics of the World (Unite?):
Labor Migration Systems and Personal
Trajectories of Household Workers in
Historical and Global Perspective
CHRISTIANE HARZIG
WOMEN WHO MIGRATE to take
up waged domestic labor form the largest single female category of migrant
labor, not only in the twentieth and twenty-first century but in fact
throughout the history of migration. This is accounted for by economic
restructuring processes (mainly agrarian and in the textile industry),
by an uneven distribution of wealth between regions and nations, and by
changes in the international division of labor. Different parts of the
world are connected and related by various domestic workers' migration
systems, however, their exact volume, trends and developments over time
are almost impossible to determine. Cynthia Enloe provides for a compelling
cultural-political analysis to explain today's migration of women into
domestic service, situating it appropriately at the juncture of international
politics, its domestic political implications, and the historical role
of women in society: International debt politics has helped create the
incentives for many women to emigrate, while at the same time it has made
governments dependent on the money those women send home to their families.
The International Monetary Fund [which pressures] . . .
indebted governments to adopt politics which will maximize a country's
ability to repay its outstanding loans with interest, has insisted that
governments cut their social service budgets. Reductions in food-price
subsidies are high on the IMF's list of demands . . . .
Keeping wages down, cutting back public works, reducing the numbers of
government employees, rolling back health and education budgets—these
are standard IMF prescriptions for indebted governments . . . .
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