000 01366nam a22001577a 4500
999 _c519165
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100 _aPandey, Kritika et al
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245 _aEssential and expendable: Migrant domestic workers and the Covid-19 pandemic
260 _aAmerican Behavioral Scientist
300 _a65(10), Sep, 2021: p.1287-1301
520 _aIn this article, we examine the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the labor conditions of domestic workers in the epicenter of the United States. We focus our analysis on the symbolic categorization of domestic work as “essential labor.” While domestic workers are lauded as heroes in public discourse, we argue that this symbolic recognition does not extend to material remuneration. Instead, we find that labor conditions better fit their categorization as expendable essential workers, meaning those whose essential labor is magnified during the pandemic but whose work remains materially undervalued. Data used in this article draw from observations of more than 30 hours of virtual town hall meetings on the pandemic hosted by migrant domestic worker advocacy groups in Los Angeles and New York. – Reproduce
650 _aEssential workers, Elderly care, Domestic work, Migrant labor
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773 _aAmerican Behavioral Scientist
906 _aEMPLOYEES RIGHT
942 _cAR