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Beyond the victim: Capabilities and livelihood in Filipina experiences of domestic work in Paris and Hong Kong
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Anthropology
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/ Social issues & processes
2010
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Beyond the victim: Capabilities and livelihood in Filipina experiences of domestic work in Paris and Hong Kong
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/ Social issues & processes
2010
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Beyond the victim: Capabilities and livelihood in Filipina experiences of domestic work in Paris and Hong Kong
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Beyond the victim: Capabilities and livelihood in Filipina experiences of domestic work in Paris and Hong Kong
2010
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Overview
While international anti-traffi cking policies have traditionally been confi ned to
the protection of women traffi cked for prostitution, in 2000, the UN Traffi cking
Protocol also recognized overseas domestic workers (ODWs) as unskilled female
labor migrants vulnerable to slavery and similar practices. 2 This was a response
not only to the large volume of female labor migration for domestic work identifi ed in recent decades but also to the myriad reports and publications on exploitation by employers and traffi ckers. The traditional anti-traffi cking principle of
rescuing, reintegrating and repatriating the victim was thus extended to apply to
female ODWs. The effi cacy of this victim-based principle, however, has increasingly been shown to have more relevance in legitimizing increased protection for
receiving countries’ borders than for the migrant worker (see Doezema 2000,
2002; also Dewey and Zheng in this volume). Despite more recent advances in
foregrounding migrant women’s agency and rights as workers, efforts remain
hampered by both increasing inequality within the global economy and tightening
immigration policies. From poor countries with very limited livelihood options,
these migrant women choose overseas domestic work, often at the expense of
their human rights. As migrants, they are outsiders whose rights are superseded
by the rights of the sovereign, receiving-state while unenforceable by the sending
state (Stasiulis and Bakan 1997 ). The agency-rights approach has thus done little
to change the historical course of anti-traffi cking policy.
Publisher
Routledge,Taylor & Francis Group
ISBN
0415571820, 9780415571821
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