Based on an ethnographic study on motility and gendered work cultures, the paper sheds light on Serbian female domestic workers who commute (in the three months visa regime) between Germany and Serbia in order to perform care and domestic in the private households. The paper brings together the specific characteristics of irregular work and regular circular migration highlighting the specific position of Serbian care workers in German informal care market and necessity of better qualitative understanding of multiplicity of dimensions of social reality that shape migrant worker’s experiences and lives apart from gender – age, nationality, religion, different social and educational background and geopolitical location. Using the concept of “motility” – ability to move, paper explores individuals' capacities and skills that either directly or indirectly influence physical mobility, knowledge or the recognition for the need of knowledge on how to cross border and how to stay mobile which redirects our attention to the aspirations and lives of women who, despite myriad impediments, move between German cities and their home communities. The analysis of in-depth interviews shows that strategies these women use to be able to move for work (for example, building a socil networks, gaining a new skills, acquiring a knowledge about movement regulations, etc.) are a basis for understanding of women’s decisions and opportunities to move, as these constitute their everyday experiences and practices which are not marked only by risks but also by personal transformations.
Showing posts with label domestic and care work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label domestic and care work. Show all posts
Sunday, 27 May 2018
Wednesday, 3 January 2018
Tanja Visic presents a working paper on ' “It’s time to move on”: Theoretical and conceptual framing of research on gendered aspects of contemporary female labor migration from the Former Yugoslavia to Germany'
Framed as an outline of theoretical and
methodological chapter of my dissertation this colloquium paper aims to to take
an angle on what has been written so far and to situate my dissertation project
in the broader literature on gender and migration studies whilst opening the
door for qualitative research on gendered aspects of “labouring mobilities” of
women from the Former Yugoslavia countries in Germany. The first aim of the
paper is to take a chronological perspective, tracing the development of gender
and migration studies in order to show how female migration is brought out of
the shadow in many disciplines and how feminist academic critique affected main
migration theories and paradigms creating a firm ground for interdisciplinary
discussion in studies of migration. The second aim of the paper is to provide
theoretical and conceptual framework for ethnographic research on domestic and
care work from ex-Yugoslavia countries. As this is the first study discussing
the relationship between gender and female migration from post-Yugoslavian
societies to Germany, this paper seeks to address issues of geographical
contextualization of female labor migration in order to challenge dominant
concepts in the field of research while taking into account a historical
background and problems of production of knowledge which contributes to
understanding and explaining female migration for the last several decades. The
theoretical framework will be used for researching and understanding how the
citizenship, modes of employment and recruitment strategies informs life
experiences and life biographies of women workers and and how contradictory
migration policies allow to laboring subjects to combine irregular and regular
aspects of employment – which will be the main focus of the following
colloquium paper.
Thursday, 3 November 2016
Tanja Visic is presenting a working paper on 'Ethnography of living arrangements, informal work and the transnational care: Experiences of domestic workers from the former Yugoslavia in Germany'
The main objective of the doctoral research project is to examine the phenomenon of care and domestic
work from a perspective that combines a macro-level and micro-level using ethnographic approach
based on case studies, thick descriptions and perspectives from the actor’s points of view. The text you
are reading is doctoral dissertation description which is divided into five parts. The first part introduces
the subject of research, main research questions and information about fieldwork that has been
conducted so far. The next two sections outline main theoretical debates around domestic and care work
within feminist theorization of care work, migration and globalization studies. In the fourth and fifth
section I contextualize previously mentioned debates within Yugoslav and post-Yugoslav female labour
migration indicating the research gaps in the field and potential contributions of my research project.
Next two parts will inform you about research questions, levels of analysis, approach to the research
and concepts which will be applied in the study. In the last part I will present multiple practices of data
collection known as ethnography I use in the research, and shortly introduce the methodology, namely
the challenges of feminist ethnography while focusing on production of knowledge about women lives
in specific socio-cultural contexts.
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