Ethiopian Migrant Domestic Workers

Ethiopian Migrant Domestic Workers PDF

Author: Bina Fernandez

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2019-08-06

Total Pages: 156

ISBN-13: 303024055X

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This book tells the stories of the Ethiopian women who migrate to work as domestic workers in the Middle East. Drawing on qualitative research in Ethiopia, Lebanon and Kuwait, the author reveals how women’s aspirations to migrate are constituted within unequal gendered structures of opportunity in Ethiopia and asks us to consider how gender, race, class and nationality intersect in the construction of migrant subjectivities and agency. By analysing the impact of migration on social reproduction both in Ethiopia and the destination countries, the book offers fresh empirical and theoretical insights into the largest stream of women’s autonomous international migration from Africa.

Reconfiguring Care Relationships

Reconfiguring Care Relationships PDF

Author: Bina Fernandez

Publisher:

Published: 2017

Total Pages: 21

ISBN-13: 9789210451925

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Migration reconfigures care relationships as people adapt to employment, entitlements and care practices in a new context. While a rich genre of analysis of "global care chains" draws attention to how disadvantaged female migrant care workers from the global South fill the "care deficit" in high-income countries, these analyses tend to privilege care services and arrangements in the global North and the migrant as the provider of care. In contrast, there is little research on how migrants from developing countries meet their own and their families' care needs, irrespective of whether they are paid care workers in the destination. In particular, we know little about the care needs of unskilled or semi-skilled migrant workers and refugees who occupy the less privileged circuits of contemporary global mobility and who are often marginalized from state social policies that address care needs. This paper offers an analysis of the effects of migration on the care needs and relationships of Ethiopian migrant mothers and their families and their access to childcare in destination countries. Specifically, it draws on empirical research on the experiences of Ethiopian migrant domestic workers who have children while in Lebanon and the experiences of Ethiopian women refugees with children who have resettled in Australia.

Ethiopian Labour Migration to the Gulf and South Africa

Ethiopian Labour Migration to the Gulf and South Africa PDF

Author: Asnake Kefale

Publisher: African Books Collective

Published: 2016-05-11

Total Pages: 111

ISBN-13: 999445059X

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The major objective of the research is to produce evidence-based knowledge on the social and economic impacts of labour migration by looking at the challenges and opportunities of Ethiopian labour migration to the Gulf and South Africa. On the one hand, international migration from Ethiopia could be considered as an aspect of development problem. The major push factors that forces Ethiopian migrants to the Gulf and South Africa are economic/developmental problems ranging from lack of employment opportunities to wage differentials. On the other hand, international migration could be considered as an important resource that could be tapped for accelerating socio-economic development. At the general level, this research aims to examine the successes and failures of policies and institutions in realising the potentials of international migration for socio-economic development of the country and minimizing its adverse impacts. At the same time, the growing problem of illegal migration will be examined.

Migrant Domestic Workers in the Middle East

Migrant Domestic Workers in the Middle East PDF

Author: B. Fernandez

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2014-12-04

Total Pages: 199

ISBN-13: 1137482117

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For over half a century, the Middle East has been major migration corridor for domestic workers from Asia and Africa. This book Illuminates the multidimensionality of these workers' lives as they engage in finding a balance between acting and being acted upon, struggle and accommodation, and movement and stasis.

Protection of Migrant Workers' Rights

Protection of Migrant Workers' Rights PDF

Author: Wondwosen Mengesha Desalegn

Publisher: LAP Lambert Academic Publishing

Published: 2011-09

Total Pages: 112

ISBN-13: 9783846503225

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Ethiopian migrant workers, a great majority of whom being women, travel through regular and irregular channels to get to some of their major destination countries in the Middle East and the Gulf. These migrant workers primarily engage in low skilled areas of domestic and care services which are often left out of a right based discourse. Domestic and care works, often occupied by migrant domestic workers, are not regarded as work proper and therefore they are not regulated by the domestic labor laws of destination countries. However, the major problems faced by migrant domestic workers are violations of those basic rights, which are suppose to be protected under International Human Rights instruments and the international law on migration. This book analyzes the body of international human rights instruments and international law on migration and their applicability to migrant workers in general and migrant domestic workers in particular including those in irregular situation. Furthermore, it expounds on the history, trajectory, push and pull factors of Ethiopians' labor migration as well as the abuses and violations that this group suffers in all stages of the migration process.

Trafficking in Persons Overseas for Labour Purposes

Trafficking in Persons Overseas for Labour Purposes PDF

Author:

Publisher: ILO Country Office Addis Ababa International Labour Organization

Published: 2011-01-01

Total Pages: 91

ISBN-13: 9789221251323

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Focuses on overseas trafficking of persons to the Middle East for labour exploitation as domestic workers. Based on a research conducted between July and October 2010. Data were collected from nine study sites including the federal cities of Addis Ababa and Dire Dawa and the regional cities of Shashemene, Hawassa, Bahir Dar, Jimma, Adama, Dessie and Mekelle. Primary information was collected from key institutional stakeholders, law enforcement and judicial officials, representatives of private employment agencies (PEAs), victims and returnees, parents of victims, key informants about the operation of brokers, and community members representing kebele administration and different social, religious and community groups. The respondents for the research reached a total of 229 persons. The tools used to gather the primary information were questionnaires and interview/focus group discussion (FGD) guidelines, and review of secondary sources. A total of 21 court cases (13 of which involved 50 victims) and dossiers of 104 returnees/victims and 131 files of potential migrants were reviewed.

The Gate of Weeping

The Gate of Weeping PDF

Author: Eva Rose Melstrom

Publisher:

Published: 2021

Total Pages: 363

ISBN-13:

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Dreams of the bounties born by distant lands are both fabled and fact, immanence and transcendence. Such fantastical imaginings can coax an individual toward an audacious life decision, and it is this enticing entelechy that lies at the core of this study. This project examines how the tangible possibility for a 'better' life articulates with the ascendence of female domestic labor migration from Ethiopia to the Arab States of the Persian Gulf. I explore how powerful desires of becoming a sovereign caretaker reveal the ethical projects undertaken by women in contemporary Ethiopia. In asking how such desires and failed aspirations for the good life map on to the psycho-affective realm, my work situates experiences of mental and emotional unwellness as a place of social and psychic mediation-that is, episodes of "sickness" reflect the precarious globalized processes of human labor exchange between regions of the Global South. I consider individual women's narratives regarding their migration journeys, domestic work, and corresponding "sickness" as distinctive modalities of desire.I maintain that the mental illness and associated treatment discourses surrounding returned Ethiopian domestic workers are unique to a distinct social, cultural, and economic, ordering of contemporary Ethiopia. I argue that such broad generalizations based on western notions of classification flatten the lived reality of mental and emotional unwellness particular to migrant domestic workers. By valuing individually narrativized experiences of mental and emotional unwellness, my work reveals that "mental illness" is instead described by my interlocutors as "sickness," and is specifically tied to experiences of ambivalent and ambiguous self-understanding and self-formation. By untangling the ambiguities and individual subjectivities present in the diagnosis and personal experiences of mental and emotional unwellness, this study illuminates how individual women recognize and sense what causes, constitutes, and cures a "sick" self. This project gives particular attention to the structures of social relationships, highlighting how individual and national precarity is embodied and prescribed at the individual and societal level of the female body. In my adherence to feminist theory, I advance the notion that their migration is a form of quiet revolution, and their "sickness" follows experiences of unanticipated oppression. This impoverished subjectivity follows new and unfamiliar encounters with forms of subjugation and domination perpetuated by their employers. I, therefore, consider "sickness" as a mode of expressing unwellness in relation to micro and macro forms of domination in articulation with desire and a unique form of self-confident understanding. In questioning why and how this particular group of women develop and express these forms of unwellness, and why psychiatric-based care providers interpret and treat these women's subjective expressions as mental illness, this research makes visible the realities of complex mental and emotional unwellness. In a broad sense, this examination of individual and intersubjective understandings of unwell returned Ethiopian domestic workers likewise offers an anthropological evaluation of the relationship between mental and emotional unwellness and migration, in relation to growing power imbalances and human rights issues operating within Ethiopia and between Ethiopia and the Arab States of the Persian Gulf.

Youth on the Move

Youth on the Move PDF

Author: Asnake Kefale

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2021-12-01

Total Pages: 271

ISBN-13: 0197644244

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At a time when policies are increasingly against it, international migration has become the subject of great public and academic attention. This book departs from the dominant approach of studying international migration at macro level, and from the perspective of destination countries. The contributors here seek to do more than 'scratch the surface' of the migration process, by foregrounding the voices and views of Ethiopian youth-potential migrants and returnees-and of their sending communities. The volume focuses on the perspective and agency of these young people, both potential migrants and returnees, to better understand migration decision-making, experiences and outcomes. It brings together rarely documented cases of young men and women from several communities across Ethiopia, migrating to the Gulf and South Africa. Explaining the agency of local actors-prospective migrants, brokers and sending families-Youth on the Move illuminates the pervasive, persistent failure of state attempts to regulate migration. Moreover, it examines the financing of migration and the sharing of remittances, within a culturally situated moral economy. While accounts centered on economics and political violence are important, the contributors demonstrate compellingly that these factors alone cannot provide a full understanding of migration's complexity, nor of its social realities.