Title of article
Transnational domestication: state power and Indonesian migrant women in Saudi Arabia
Author/Authors
Rachel Silvey، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
20
From page
245
To page
264
Abstract
Recent efforts to elaborate a feminist geopolitics have centered on challenging and expanding classical spatializations of “the political”. Building on this growing body of work, this article explores the gender politics of state power as refracted in struggles over women’s transnational migration and domestic labor. Specifically, it analyzes the Indonesian and Saudi states’ involvement in shaping the migration and working conditions of Indonesian domestic servants employed in Saudi Arabia. It examines key aspects of both states’ direct and indirect influences on the feminization of the migrant labor force, the limitations of their policies for protecting overseas migrant women, and the political strategies that activists are employing to broaden the states’ spaces and scales of jurisdiction. It points up gender-specific limits to the internationalization of state labor regulation, as well as possibilities that NGOs have identified for improving the protection of migrant workers in this transnational context. It thus identifies some particular ways in which contestations around women’s transnational labor migration and gendered constructions of domestic labor are interlinked with the changing geographies of state power.
Keywords
GENDER , Transnational migration , The state , Domestic labor , Indonesia , Saudi Arabia
Journal title
Political Geography
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Political Geography
Record number
1292037
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