TY - JOUR
T1 - The giving up of weekly rest-days by migrant domestic workers in Singapore
T2 - When submission is both resistance and victimhood
AU - Schumann, Margaret Fenerty
AU - Paul, Anju Mary
N1 - Funding Information:
† Both authors contributed equally to this paper. .................................................................................................................. * Funding for the field research for this paper came from Yale-NUS College. Rohan P. Naidu assisted with online profile data collection. This paper has benefited from feedback on earlier drafts from Zachary Howlett, Philip Gorski, Steven Oliver, Benjamin Schupmann, and presentations at the Yale-NUS Social Science Brownbag Series, and the TWC2 Research Forum. The comments of three anonymous reviewers are also gratefully acknowledged. All errors are the authors’ own. Please address correspondence to Anju Mary Paul, Yale-NUS College, 10 College Avenue West, #01-101, Singapore 138609, +65-98168035. Email: [email protected] ..................................................................................................................
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Why do so few live-in migrant domestic workers (MDWs) in Singapore utilize their weekly rest-day entitlement? Using data drawn from 3,886 online profiles of prospective MDWs and 40 interview sessions with MDWs, employers, and manpower agencies, we demonstrate how the industry encourages a logic of submission around rest-days. Through processual analysis, we unearth multiple, repeated moments of capitulation at key moments in a MDW’s work-life: (1) their interactions with a recruitment agency while still in their home country; (2) their matching with an overseas employer; (3) the duration of their two-year contract; and (4) the time of contract renewal. Submission to less frequent rest-days can secure their employability and financial mobility but also further individuates the MDW within the employer’s household and may lead to the engraining of a habitus of submissiveness towards their employers that can open the door to workers’ exploitation. We demonstrate how nationality and work experience further inflect this logic of submission to motivate non-Filipina and inexperienced MDWs to request even fewer rest-days than their counterparts. By combining feminist migration scholarship on Asian MDWs, with a sociology of law analysis, we offer up an example of how the same act of submission can simultaneously embody both resistance and victimhood depending upon the temporal and spatial scale used, and varying interpretations of the rest-day benefit as a much-needed respite, a monetizable benefit, or a signaling mechanism.
AB - Why do so few live-in migrant domestic workers (MDWs) in Singapore utilize their weekly rest-day entitlement? Using data drawn from 3,886 online profiles of prospective MDWs and 40 interview sessions with MDWs, employers, and manpower agencies, we demonstrate how the industry encourages a logic of submission around rest-days. Through processual analysis, we unearth multiple, repeated moments of capitulation at key moments in a MDW’s work-life: (1) their interactions with a recruitment agency while still in their home country; (2) their matching with an overseas employer; (3) the duration of their two-year contract; and (4) the time of contract renewal. Submission to less frequent rest-days can secure their employability and financial mobility but also further individuates the MDW within the employer’s household and may lead to the engraining of a habitus of submissiveness towards their employers that can open the door to workers’ exploitation. We demonstrate how nationality and work experience further inflect this logic of submission to motivate non-Filipina and inexperienced MDWs to request even fewer rest-days than their counterparts. By combining feminist migration scholarship on Asian MDWs, with a sociology of law analysis, we offer up an example of how the same act of submission can simultaneously embody both resistance and victimhood depending upon the temporal and spatial scale used, and varying interpretations of the rest-day benefit as a much-needed respite, a monetizable benefit, or a signaling mechanism.
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U2 - 10.1093/SF/SOZ089
DO - 10.1093/SF/SOZ089
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85100843738
SN - 0037-7732
VL - 98
SP - 1695
EP - 1718
JO - Social Forces
JF - Social Forces
IS - 4
ER -