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Race, gender, and surveillance of migrant domestic workers in Asia

Lee, Maggy; Johnson, Mark; McCahill, Michael

Authors

Maggy Lee

Mark Johnson



Abstract

© Maggy Lee, Mark Johnson, and Mike McCahill, 2017. This chapter provides a transnational analysis of the ways in which migrant workers are placed at the sharp end of migration control based on gendered and racialized notions of domestic labour. Migrant women from the Philippines to Hong Kong and Saudi Arabia are routinely subjected to an extensive and diffuse process of surveillance and social sorting beyond the geographic border and criminal justice system. In their country of origin, women’s mobilities are conditioned by their willingness to produce a documented identity as good women and disciplined workers. In their countries of destination, they are subjected to a range of state and non-state monitoring processes that seek to racially assign and keep different sorts of migrant women in their place as foreign residents and disposable workers. Ultimately, differential inclusion remains underpinned by a criminal justice system that can bear down heavily on migrants through the threat of criminalization, detention, and deportation.

Citation

Lee, M., Johnson, M., & McCahill, M. (2018). Race, gender, and surveillance of migrant domestic workers in Asia. In Race, criminal justice, and migration control: enforcing the boundaries of belonging (13-28). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198814887.003.0002

Publication Date 2018
Deposit Date Oct 18, 2019
Publisher Oxford University Press
Pages 13-28
Book Title Race, criminal justice, and migration control: enforcing the boundaries of belonging
Chapter Number 1
ISBN 9780198814887
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198814887.003.0002
Keywords Domestic labour; Gender; Hong Kong; Irregular migrants; Migrant workers; Migration control; Racialization; Philippines; Saudi Arabia; Surveillance
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/2956358
Contract Date Oct 1, 2018