The unforgiving work environment of black African women domestic workers in a post-apartheid South Africa

被引:2
作者
Dawood, Q. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Seedat-Khan, M. [4 ,5 ,6 ,7 ]
机构
[1] IIEs Varsity Coll, Cape Town, South Africa
[2] Int Sociol Assoc RC 52, Madrid, Spain
[3] Dev Studies Assoc DSA, Brighton, E Sussex, England
[4] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Clin Sociol Postgrad Programme, Durban, South Africa
[5] Taylors Univ Malaysia, Subang Jaya, Malaysia
[6] Assoc Appl & Clin Sociol, Ypsilanti, MI USA
[7] Int Sociol Assoc, Res Comm Clin Sociol RC46, Madrid, Spain
关键词
Bonded labour; clinical intervention; domestic worker; enslavement; post-apartheid; South Africa; women;
D O I
10.1080/09614524.2022.2115977
中图分类号
F0 [经济学]; F1 [世界各国经济概况、经济史、经济地理]; C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
0201 ; 020105 ; 03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
In democratic South Africa, many Black African women are still subjugated by being employed as domestic workers. Increasing evidence emerged amid the COVID-19 pandemic revealing unmistakable signs of modern-day slavery among South African Black domestic workers. This paper proposes a clinical model which examines how gender, class, and race intersections affect the ways in which specifically identified change agents offer new, transforming interventions via clinical intervention. Adopting a clinical approach augments identification of a specific social problem from a scientifically systematic applied approach built on applied theory. We report on the conditions facing vulnerable Black African women using a bricolage research approach. The resulting model explicitly identifies systemic inequalities and indicates how to reduce exploitation and protect workers. The bricolage approach aided the secondary qualitative analysis of complex bonded-labour intersections. The problem of Black African women living as bonded domestic labour is augmented by the girl children's primary socialisation, Western patriarchal re-socialisation which sustains apartheid, and race, class, occupational, and gender inequalities.
引用
收藏
页码:168 / 179
页数:12
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