We live here, and we are queer!: young gay connected migrants' transnational ties and integration in the Netherlands
Autor/in:
Patterson, Jeffrey; Leurs, Koen
Quelle: Media and Communication, 7 (2019) 1, S 90-101
Inhalt: Upon arrival to Europe, young migrants are found grappling with new language demands, cultural expectations, values, and beliefs that may differ from global youth culture and their country of origin. This process of coming-of-age while on-the-move is increasingly digitally mediated. Young migrants are "connected migrants", using smart phones and social media to maintain bonding ties with their home country while establishing new bridging relationships with peers in their country of arrival (Diminescu, 2008). Drawing on the feminist perspective of intersectionality which alerts us socio-cultural categories like age, race, nationality, migration status, gender and sexuality impact upon identification and subordination, we contend it is problematic to homogenize these experiences to all gay young adult migrants. The realities of settlement and integration starkly differ between desired migrants -such as elite expatriates and heterosexuals – and those living on the margins of Europe- forced migrants and lesbian, gay, trans, queer and intersex (LGBTQI) migrants. Drawing on 11 in-depth interviews conducted in Amsterdam, the Netherlands with gay young adult forced and voluntary migrants, this paper aims to understand how sexual identification in tandem with bonding and bridging social capital diverge and converge between the two groups all while considering the interplay between their online and offline entanglements of their worlds.
Schlagwörter:Sozialkapital; social capital; Migrant; migrant; Diaspora; diaspora; Digitale Medien; digital media; soziale Beziehungen; social relations; ethnische Beziehungen; ethnic relations; Sexualität; sexuality; Homosexualität; homosexuality; Soziale Medien; social media; Jugendlicher; adolescent; Kommunikation; communication; Niederlande; Netherlands; Transsexualität; transsexualism
SSOAR Kategorie:Migration, interpersonelle Kommunikation, Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung
We live here, and we are queer!: young gay connected migrants' transnational ties and integration in the Netherlands
Autor/in:
Patterson, Jeffrey; Leurs, Koen
Quelle: Media and Communication, 7 (2019) 1, S 90-101
Inhalt: Upon arrival to Europe, young migrants are found grappling with new language demands, cultural expectations, values, and beliefs that may differ from global youth culture and their country of origin. This process of coming-of-age while on-the-move is increasingly digitally mediated. Young migrants are "connected migrants", using smart phones and social media to maintain bonding ties with their home country while establishing new bridging relationships with peers in their country of arrival (Diminescu, 2008). Drawing on the feminist perspective of intersectionality which alerts us socio-cultural categories like age, race, nationality, migration status, gender and sexuality impact upon identification and subordination, we contend it is problematic to homogenize these experiences to all gay young adult migrants. The realities of settlement and integration starkly differ between desired migrants -such as elite expatriates and heterosexuals – and those living on the margins of Europe- forced migrants and lesbian, gay, trans, queer and intersex (LGBTQI) migrants. Drawing on 11 in-depth interviews conducted in Amsterdam, the Netherlands with gay young adult forced and voluntary migrants, this paper aims to understand how sexual identification in tandem with bonding and bridging social capital diverge and converge between the two groups all while considering the interplay between their online and offline entanglements of their worlds.
Schlagwörter:Sozialkapital; social capital; Migrant; migrant; Diaspora; diaspora; Digitale Medien; digital media; soziale Beziehungen; social relations; ethnische Beziehungen; ethnic relations; Sexualität; sexuality; Homosexualität; homosexuality; Soziale Medien; social media; Jugendlicher; adolescent; Kommunikation; communication; Niederlande; Netherlands; Transsexualität; transsexualism
SSOAR Kategorie:Migration, interpersonelle Kommunikation, Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung
A New Service Class in the Public Sector? The Role of Femonationalism in Unemployment Policies
Autor/in:
Mulinari, Paula
Quelle: Social Inclusion, 6 (2018) 4, S 36-47
Inhalt: This article aims to explore the content embedded in the figuration of ‘foreign-born unemployed women’ and how discourses of gender equality are used to create an emerging racialised service class within the Swedish public sector. Influenced by the concept of femonationalism, the article explores how the introduction of the Extra Services unemployment reforms facilitates the creation of a service class whose purpose is to make it possible for the regular workforce to continue to function despite cutbacks and the neoliberal management of professional care work in the public sector. The study identifies a shift in the discourse, where, while migrant women continue to be represented as victims in public discourses concerning unemployment, they are also represented as being lazy and unwilling to work, qualities that legitimate the need for more repressive interventions towards the group, often described as feminist interventions that will rescue migrant women and their children.
Care-Arbeit politisieren: Herausforderungen der (Selbst-)Organisierung von migrantischen 24h-Betreuerinnen
Titelübersetzung:Politicize care work: challenges of the (self-)organizing of migrant 24h-caregivers
Autor/in:
Schilliger, Sarah; Schilling, Katharina
Quelle: Femina Politica - Zeitschrift für feministische Politikwissenschaft, 26 (2017) 2, S 101-116
Inhalt: "In Privathaushalten von pflegebedürftigen Menschen hat sich in Deutschland und der Schweiz in den letzten Jahren ein Niedriglohnsektor etabliert, der stark vergeschlechtlicht und ethnisiert ist. Zwar gibt es in beiden Ländern politische und gewerkschaftliche Bestrebungen, diesen Arbeitssektor zu regulieren. Doch zeigt sich im Privathaushalt generell die Schwierigkeit, dass gesetzliche Regelungen aufgrund von starken Machthierarchien und fehlender Kontrollen häufig wenig Geltungskraft entfalten. Mobilisierungen auf internationaler Ebene demonstrieren jedoch, wie migrantische Care-Arbeiterinnen durch (Selbst)Organisation eine Verbesserung ihrer Arbeits- und Lebensbedingungen erkämpfen konnten. Am Beispiel Deutschlands und der Schweiz fragen wir in unserem Beitrag nach den Möglichkeiten und Herausforderungen der Politisierung von kommerzialisierter Care-Arbeit durch migrantische (Selbst-)Organisierung. Hierfür identifizieren wir zunächst die sich zeigenden Schwierigkeiten anhand von drei Faktorenbündeln: a) Arbeit in der privaten Sphäre des Haushalts; b) Displacement und limitiertes Citizenship im Kontext der Transmigration und c) unzureichende institutionelle Unterstützung. Wie es trotzdem zumindest auf lokaler Ebene zu einer bottom-up Mobilisierung in diesem Sektor kommen kann, arbeiten wir anschließend exemplarisch am Netzwerk Respekt@vpod in Basel heraus. Dabei identifizieren wir drei zentrale Strategien: a) das strategische Einfordern von Rechten und das Heraustreten aus der privaten Sphäre mithilfe von strategischer Prozessführung und öffentlicher Kampagnenarbeit; b) die Überwindung der migrationsbedingten Isolation durch einen Prozess des Emplacements, d.h. der alltäglichen sozialen Vernetzung in der migrantischen Community und c) die gelungene Zusammenarbeit auf Augenhöhe zwischen engagierten live-in Care-Arbeiterinnen und der Gewerkschaft vpod." (Autorenreferat)
Inhalt: "In private households of elderly people in need of care, a highly gendered and ethnicized low-wage sector has emerged in Germany and Switzerland over the last few years. Despite political and trade union efforts in both countries to regulate this labor sector, there is a general difficulty to enforce legislations in private households due to strong power hierarchies and lack of controls. Mobilizations at the international level, however, demonstrate how female migrant care workers fight for the improvement of their working and living conditions through (self-)organizing. Looking at Germany and Switzerland, we investigate possibilities and challenges of the politicization of commercialized care work through migrant (self-)organizing. To this end, we first identify the difficulties that appear using three sets of factors: a) work in the private sphere of the household; b) displacement and limited citizenship in the context of transmigration and c) insufficient institutional support. Using the example of the network Respekt@vpod in Basel, we then analyze how, at least at the local level, a bottom-up mobilization in this sector is nevertheless possible. We identify three key strategies: a) the strategic demand for rights and the emergence from the private sphere through strategic law suits and public campaigning; b) overcoming the migration induced isolation by a process of emplacement, through the everyday social networking in the migrant community and c) a successful collaboration at eye level between female activist live-in care workers and the trade union." (author's abstract)
Schlagwörter:häusliche Pflege; home care; Privathaushalt; private household; Pflegeperson; caregiver; Niedriglohn; low wage; Prekarisierung; precariousness; Migrant; migrant; woman; Organisationen; organizations; Vernetzung; networking; Arbeitsbedingungen; working conditions; Arbeitsrecht; labor law; Gewerkschaft; trade union; Mobilisierung; mobilization; Federal Republic of Germany; Schweiz; Switzerland
SSOAR Kategorie:Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung, Migration, Industrie- und Betriebssoziologie, Arbeitssoziologie, industrielle Beziehungen
Quelle: Indian Journal of Youth and Adolescent Health, 3 (2016) 4, S 8-21
Inhalt: Migrant adolescent girls in India’s fast-growing urban-slum population face multiple intersecting vulnerabilities,
including gender, poverty and migrant-status.
The study aims to understand the opportunities and challenges for migrant adolescent girls in low-income urban
slum settings.
Qualitative data were collected through interviews with girls aged 12-19 who migrated during the past two years
and non-migrant adolescent girls for comparison to explore their experiences in fast-growing Indore. A groupinterview with slum women’s group members discussedways to address challenges.
Push/pull factors linked with different employment/educational opportunities between rural and urban areas
motivated families of unmarried girls to migrate. Recently married girls joined city-based families or accompanied
husbands who were labor migrants. Neither married nor unmarried girls played decision-making roles in
migration.
Married migrant adolescent girls faced challenges in accessing education, employment, social opportunities and
services owing to restrictions on freedom of movement, weak social networks, and little awareness of
opportunities and services. Childbearing migrant girls faced particular risks. Contact with their natal families being
limited, the quality of relationship with husbands and marital families was crucial for married girls’well-being.
Unmarried girls attending schools were positive about the migration experience, perceiving the city to offer
greater educational opportunities. Through school, they accessed opportunities for new relationships and social
activities. Not all unmarried adolescent-girls wereable to access opportunities owing to family restrictions and
economic circumstances. These girls’ worlds remained small despite moving to a large city.
Where girls’ economic and/or family and social circumstances allowed, migration entailed a positive change that
enhanced their opportunities. Specific challenges of this population segment need focus in policies and programs,
prioritizing three particularly vulnerable groups: girls who are neither in education nor employment, pregnant
girls or new mothers, and those with difficult relationships in marital homes. Proactive outreach to raise awareness about opportunities and services and fostering social networks through front-line workers and slum women’s groups are recommended.
Schlagwörter:labor migration; Indien; soziales Netzwerk; adolescence; Schwangerschaft; slum; Familiensituation; pregnancy; Migrant; Arbeitsmigration; sozioökonomische Faktoren; large city; Adoleszenz; Jugendlicher; Großstadt; social inequality; Südasien; Slum; poverty; adolescent; migrant; Armut; health care; girl; marriage immigration; social network; Gesundheitsversorgung; Mädchen; socioeconomic factors; exclusion; Entwicklungsland; South Asia; Exklusion; India; family situation; soziale Ungleichheit; Heiratsmigration; developing country; married girls; internal migration; SDGs; women's groups
SSOAR Kategorie:Entwicklungsländersoziologie, Entwicklungssoziologie, Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung, Gesundheitspolitik, Migration
Partizipationsbiographien engagierter Migrantinnen: eine biographieanalytische Studie über Partizipationsprozesse im Kontext von Migration und Geschlecht
Autor/in:
Bel Adasme, Melisa
Quelle:
Inhalt: Migrantinnen engagieren sich auf vielfältiger Weise in der deutschen Gesellschaft, dies wird jedoch oft nicht oder kaum wahrgenommen. Die wenigen Studien, die sich mit Formen des Engagements von Migrantinnen beschäftigen, erklären nicht, warum Engagement ausgerechnet in einem bestimmten Bereich vollzogen wird und nicht in anderen. Genauso wenig wird etwas über die Umstände und die zeitlichen Ereignisabfolgen ausgesagt, die zum Engagement führen. Die biographische Perspektive ermöglicht es, den biographischen Partizipationsprozess, in dem sich Engagement herausbildet, in den Blick zu nehmen. So werden einerseits Migrantinnen als handelnde Akteurinnen und „Expertinnen“ wahrgenommen und ihre Ressourcen in den Vordergrund gestellt. Andererseits wird sichtbar, dass Engagement nur dann zustande kommt, wenn es zu der Lebenssituation und den jeweiligen biografischen Präferenzen „passt“. Dank dieser Perspektive können die partizipationsbiographischen Potenziale und Ressourcen, die sich prozesshaft in Wechselwirkung mit gesellschaftlichen Strukturen entwickeln und entfalten, in ihrer Entstehung betrachtet und analysiert werden.
24-Stunden-Betreuung in Österreich - die Nutzung migrantisierter Arbeitskraft: Vorzeigemodell oder Arbeitsausbeutung?
Autor/in:
Bachinger, Almut
Quelle: Femina Politica - Zeitschrift für feministische Politikwissenschaft, 25 (2016) 1, S 39-51
Inhalt: "Bezahlte Care- und Hausarbeit, die von MigrantInnen geleistet wird, hat seit den 1990er-Jahren immer weitere Verbreitung im globalen Maßstab erreicht. Im Bereich der Altenpflege und -versorgung entwickelten sich besonders prekäre Arbeitsarrangements und migrantische Arbeitskräfte füllen jene Care Lücken, die nicht mehr durch unbezahlte Arbeit abgedeckt werden. Der Beitrag zeigt am Beispiel der 24 Stunden Pflege in Österreich, dass es dabei auch zur systematischen Ausbeutung durch europäische Wohlfahrtsstaaten kommt. Indem dort Arbeitsrecht ausgesetzt wird und die Unterschreitung von Mindestlöhnen durch Kollektivvertragslöhne rechtlich abgesichert werden, wird die geschlechtsspezifische Ausbeutung migrantischer Hausangestellten legalisiert. Dies ist möglich durch eine KomplizInnenschaft von Wohlfahrtsstaat und den NutzerInnen der ausbeuterischen Dienstleistungen." (Autorenreferat)
Inhalt: "Paid domestic labour carried out by migrants has increased globally since the 1990s. Especially in the area of care for the elderly, working conditions are extremely precarious and migrants are recruited when unpaid family care is missing. The paper reveals that European welfare states systematically exploit migrants demonstrating the example of 24 hour care in Austria. Suspending labour regulations and undermining minimum wages through collectively bargained wages, gender specific exploitation of migrant domestic workers is legalized. Complicity of welfare states and users of exploitative services enable this." (author's abstract)
Schlagwörter:Hausarbeit; housework; Altenpflege; nursing care for the elderly; Migrant; migrant; woman; Arbeitskraft; capacity to work; Arbeitsbedingungen; working conditions; prekäre Beschäftigung; precarious employment; Arbeitsrecht; labor law; Ausbeutung; exploitation; gender-specific factors; Österreich; Austria
SSOAR Kategorie:Recht, Migration, Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung, Industrie- und Betriebssoziologie, Arbeitssoziologie, industrielle Beziehungen
Reproducing and resisting the exploitative structures of global migration, gender, and labour regimes: migrant domestic workers in Lebanon
Titelübersetzung:Reproduktion und Widerstand in den ausbeuterischen Strukturen globaler Migrations-, Geschlechter- und Arbeitsregime: Migrantinnen als Hausangestellte im Libanon
Autor/in:
Maaroufi, Mouna
Quelle: Femina Politica - Zeitschrift für feministische Politikwissenschaft, 25 (2016) 1, S 52-65
Inhalt: "In einer internationalen reproduktiven Arbeitsteilung werden Verantwortungen über Haushalts- und Pflegearbeit in vielen Ländern mit hohem und mittlerem Einkommen zunehmend zu einer ausbeutbaren eingewanderten Arbeitskraft verlagert. Restriktive Migrationsregime, Geschlechterdiskriminierungen und flexible Arbeitsmärkte ermöglichen extreme Ausbeutung und Menschenrechtsverletzungen, durch die sich Arbeitsbedingungen teils Formen der Zwangsarbeit annähern. Im Libanon, erleben Hausangestellte aus verschiedenen asiatischen und afrikanischen Ländern mit zeitlich befristeten Arbeitsverträgen, die Konsequenzen dieser globalen Trends, während Versuche ihre Situation zu verbessern Hindernissen begegnen, die durch die komplexen und weitreichenden Strukturen der Ausbeutung gestellt werden. Jedoch hat das Engagement von Migrant_innen und der Zivilgesellschaft in letzter Zeit zu einer Zunahme von Initiativen geführt, die die Mobilisierung und das Empowerment von Arbeiter_innen zum Ziel haben, insbesondere die Gründung einer Gewerkschaft für Hausangestellte im Januar 2015. Im Hinblick auf diese Entwicklungen wird der Artikel die strukturellen Herausforderungen mit denen Hausangestellte auf nationalen und globalen Ebenen konfrontiert sind, sowie interne Spaltungen, die kollektive Organisation und Widerstand erschweren, darstellen. Besondere Aufmerksamkeit wird den Ungleichheiten in der internationalen reproduktiven Arbeitsteilung und den sozialen Beziehungen und Interessen zukommen, die die kontinuierliche Ausbeutung von mobilen Arbeiter_innen aufrechterhalten und weitreichende Veränderungen der Bedingungen ohne beträchtliche kollektive und transnationale Mobilisierung unwahrscheinlich machen." (Autorenreferat)
Inhalt: "In an international division of reproductive labour, responsibilities over domestic and care work in many high and middle income countries have increasingly been shifted towards an exploitable migrant work force. Restrictive migration regimes, gender discriminations, and flexible labour markets allow for extreme exploitation and human rights abuses rendering working conditions at times akin to forms of unfree labour. In Lebanon, domestic workers from diverse Asian and African countries experience the consequences of these global trends, while attempts to improve their situation face obstacles constituted by the complex and far-reaching structures of exploitation. However, the agency of migrants and the civil society has recently led to an increase of initiatives aimed at mobilizing and empowering workers, most notably a union for domestic workers established in January 2015. In view of these developments, the article will present the structural challenges migrant domestic workers face on global and national levels and the internal divisions that constrain collective organisation and resistance. Particular attention will be paid to inequalities in the international division of reproductive labour and to the social relations and interests which perpetuate the continuous exploitation of migrant workers making a profound change of conditions without substantial collective and transnational mobilisation unlikely." (author's abstract)
Schlagwörter:Hausarbeit; housework; Pflege; caregiving; Migrant; migrant; Arbeitskraft; capacity to work; Ausbeutung; exploitation; Arbeitsbedingungen; working conditions; Diskriminierung; discrimination; gender-specific factors; Prekariat; precariat; Interessenvertretung; representation of interests; Empowerment; empowerment; Ungleichheit; inequality; Arbeitsteilung; division of labor; Libanon; Lebanon; arabische Länder; Arab countries; Nahost; Middle East
SSOAR Kategorie:Migration, Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung, Recht, Industrie- und Betriebssoziologie, Arbeitssoziologie, industrielle Beziehungen
Women on the Steering Wheel: Identifying the Potentials of Women in Improving the Protection of Indonesian Women Migrant Workers
Autor/in:
Yazid, Sylvia; Dewi, Elisabeth S.
Quelle: Journal of ASEAN Studies, 3 (2015) 2, S 102-115
Inhalt: This paper is based on a research that looked into the potentials of women as stakeholders in improving the protection of Indonesian women migrant workers abroad. It was designed based on the assumptions that an identification of the potentials of women at various levels and in various institutions may positively contribute to the efforts of finding solutions for the problems faced by women migrant workers and that rather than being seen merely as victims, women should be seen as actors who can actively participate in addressing the problems. This paper analyzes efforts made by a number of Indonesian women who are publicly recognized for their works in promoting the protection of Indonesian women migrant workers, both as state and non-state actors in the context of policy making. The focus is on how these women perceive the extend to which their efforts have been able to influence the policy making process. The discussion also includes how the women responded to the challenges and opportunities that they encounter as part of their learning process. The data for this paper was gathered through interviews with six prominent woman figures who are known for their work on the issue of women migrant workers. While confirming that as actors outside the government these women have made efforts to influence the policy making process, this paper showcases that the actual impact of their efforts is highly determined by the policy environment.
Schlagwörter:labor migration; Menschenrechte; women's policy; Migrant; Arbeitsmigration; Indonesia; political influence; migrant worker; Frauenpolitik; Southeast Asia; politischer Einfluss; politische Partizipation; Interessenvertretung; Südostasien; migrant; Wanderarbeitnehmer; Indonesien; human rights; protection of employee rights; representation of interests; woman; Arbeitnehmerschutz; political participation; Entwicklungsland; developing country
SSOAR Kategorie:Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung, politische Willensbildung, politische Soziologie, politische Kultur, Migration