FEMALE DOMESTIC WORKERS. NEW CHALLENGES RAISED BY THE ILO CONVENTION

Autores

  • Dolly Natalia Caicedo Camacho

Palavras-chave:

domestic workers, international law, social and labour rights, gender

Resumo

This article analyses the 189 ILO Convention on domestic workers from a feminist and legal point of view. The ILO Convention opens with the recognition of domestic work as a labour activity. This statement represents a step forward for the acknowledgment of the domestic work’s contribution to society and the global economy, moreover when it still being a highly feminized and socially devalued activity. The ILO Convention also allocates a set of labour and social rights like wages, rest periods, conditions of health and safety, freedom of association, among others. The incorporation of a minimum working conditions may represent relevant challenges for the member states, since its domestics labour laws are characterized for the inequality regime in labour conditions or even the absence of any legislation on domestic work. The article also goes on the impact that international migration have had on domestic work, by pointing out the framework of the globalization of care in a highly unequal relationship between north and south. The article highlights the absence of a migration perspective of the ILO Convention.

Downloads

Não há dados estatísticos.

Biografia do Autor

Dolly Natalia Caicedo Camacho

Profesora Lectora de Derecho Constitucional de la Universidad Barcelona. Doctora en Derecho con mención europea por la Universidad de Barcelona (2012).

Referências

Avdan, Nazli (2012): “Human trafficking and migration control policy: vicious or virtuous cycle?”, Journal of Public Policy, 32(3), 171 – 205

Anderson, Bridget (2007) “A very private business. Exploring the demand for migrant domestic workers”, European Journal of Women’s Studies, 14 (3), 247-264

Anderson, Bridget and Ruhs, Martin (2012) Who Needs Migrant Workers? Labour Shortages, Immigration, and Public Policy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, Oxford:

Albin, Einat and Mantouvalou, Virginia (2012) “The ILO Convention on Domestic Workers: from the Shadows to the Light”, Industrial Law Journal, 41(1), 67-78

Arango, Joaquin, Díaz Gorfinkiel, Magdalena and Moualhi, Djaouida (2014) Promover la integración de las trabajadoras y los trabajadores domésticos migrantes en España. Estudios sobre migraciones laborales núm. 114, OIT

Aparicio, Marco (2005) “El derecho al trabajo”, en Sur o no Sur, los derechos sociales de las personas inmigradas. Barcelona, Icaria, p. 63-92.

Browne, Irene and Misra, Jora (2003) “The intersection of gender and race in the labour market”, Annual Review of Sociology, 29, 487-513.

Caicedo, Natalia (2016) “Cruzando las fronteras: selección de la inmigración y sus implicaciones desde la perspectiva de género”, en La Barbera MC y Cruells M., (coord.) Igualdad de Género y no discriminación de género en España: evolución, problemas, perspectivas. Madrid, Centro de Estudios Políticos y Constitucionales, (for coming)

Costello, Cathryn and Freedland, Mark (2014) Migrants at Work: Immigration and Vulnerability in Labour Law. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Devetter, François-Xavier (2013) ¿Por qué externalizar las tareas domésticas? Análisis de las lógicas desigualitarias que estructuran la demanda en Francia, Revista de Estudios Sociales, 45, 80-95.

Ehrenreich, Barbara and Hochschild, Arlie (Eds.) (2002) Global Woman: Nannies, Maids, and Sex Workers in the New Economy. London: Granta Books.

FRA (2011) Migrants in an irregular situation employed in domestic work: Fundamental rights challenges for the European Union and its Member States. European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights.

Fredman, Sandra (2015) “Home from Home: Migrant Domestic Workers and the International Labor Organization Convention on Domestic Workers”, in Costello, Cathryn and Freedland, Mark, Migrants at Work: Immigration and Vulnerability in Labour Law. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Harrington, Mona (2000) Care and Equality: Inventing a New Family Politics. New York: Routledge.

Hochschild, Arile R (2000) “Global care chains and emotional surplus value”, in Hutton, Will and Giddens, Antony (eds.) On the Edge: Living with Global Capitalism. London: Jonathan Cape.

ILO (2010) Decent work for domestic workers International Labour Conference, 99th Session, 2010, Report IV (1). Geneva: ILO

ILO (2013) Domestic workers across the world: global and regional statistics and the extent of legal protection International Labour. Geneva: ILO.

Kofman, Eleonore (2008) “Gendered Migrations, Livelihoods and Entitlements in European Welfare Regimes”, in Piper Nicola (ed.), New Perspectives on Gender and Migration, Livelihood, Rights and Entitlements. Routledge, London.

Kofman, Eleonore (2010) “Gendered migrations and the globalization of social reproduction and care: New dialogues and directions”, in Schrouver, Marlou and Yeo, Eileen (eds) Gender and Migration in Global, Historical and Theoretical Perspective. London: Routledge.

Mestre i Mestre, Ruth (2002) “Dea ex machina. Trabajadoras migrantes y negociación de la igualdad en lo doméstico”, Cuadernos de Geografía, 72, 191-206.

Moré, Paloma (2015) “When your CV is ‘To be a Latina Woman’: Re-articulation of Stereotypes and Re-construction of Identity of Ecuadorian Women Working in the Care Sector”, in La Barbera, Maria Caterina (Ed.), Identity and Migration in Europe: Multidisciplinary Perspectives, Springer.

Nussbaum, Martha (1999) Sex and Social Justice. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Oelz, Martin (2014) “El Convenio y la recomendación de la OIT sobre las trabajadoras y los trabajadores domésticos. Una oportunidad para la justicia social”, Revista Internacional del Trabajo, 133 (1), 161-195.

Oelz, Martin and Rani, Uma (2015) Domestic work, wages, and gender equality: lessons from developing countries. Working Paper 5. ILO

Parella, Sonia (2003). Immigrant women iun paid domestic service. The case of Spain and Italy. Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research, 9: 503-517

Pateman, Carole (1996) “Críticas feministas a la dicotomía público-privado”, in Castells, Carme (comp.) Prespectives Feministas en teoría política. Barcelona. Paidós.

Piper, Nicola (2005) Gender and Migration. Commissioned Background Paper for the Global Commision on International Migration. Geneva: GCIM.

Quesada Segura, Rosa (2011) “La dignificación del trabajo doméstico. El Convenio nº 189 de la OIT”, Revista General de Derecho del Trabajo y de la Seguridad Social, 27.

Publicado

2016-05-03

Como Citar

CAMACHO, D. N. C. FEMALE DOMESTIC WORKERS. NEW CHALLENGES RAISED BY THE ILO CONVENTION. Gênero & Direito, [S. l.], v. 5, n. 1, 2016. Disponível em: https://periodicos.ufpb.br/ojs/index.php/ged/article/view/28713. Acesso em: 19 nov. 2024.

Edição

Seção

Contextualizando Gênero