The ILO's Domestic Worker Convention (C189): Challenging the Gendered Disadvantage of Asia's Foreign Domestic Workers?

The International Labour Organization's Domestic Worker Convention, resolved in June 2011 and soon to come into force, is regarded as a watershed in the struggle by a host of civil society groups to get paid domestic work formally recognised, draw such work out of the shadows and secure employ...

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Main Author: Stuart C. Rosewarne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: McMaster University Library Press 2013-01-01
Series:Global Labour Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://mulpress.mcmaster.ca/globallabour/article/view/1126
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spelling doaj-f522147dbf7243b2be68fa860922c03b2021-04-02T19:08:04ZengMcMaster University Library PressGlobal Labour Journal1918-67112013-01-014110.15173/glj.v4i1.1126The ILO's Domestic Worker Convention (C189): Challenging the Gendered Disadvantage of Asia's Foreign Domestic Workers?Stuart C. Rosewarne0University of Sydney The International Labour Organization's Domestic Worker Convention, resolved in June 2011 and soon to come into force, is regarded as a watershed in the struggle by a host of civil society groups to get paid domestic work formally recognised, draw such work out of the shadows and secure employment rights and protections for this overwhelmingly female workforce. In covering all paid domestic work, the Convention can also be seen as an important initiative in promoting decent work for migrant workers and especially the many recruited from Southeast Asia and South Asia. However, improvements in employment rights and conditions will likely be frustrated by the inadequacies of the ILO as a global institutional force able to engage member nation states as well as by the entrenched structural inequities in international labour markets marked by barriers based on gender, race and ethnicity, nationality and religion and irregular employment. Progress will depend on the effectiveness of those civil society groups which were instrumental in the negotiation of the Convention to maintain the momentum to break down the barriers and states' reluctance to implement measures that abolish labour market disadvantage. https://mulpress.mcmaster.ca/globallabour/article/view/1126Domestic Worker ConventionglobalisationInternational Labour Organizationmigrant domestic worker
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stuart C. Rosewarne
spellingShingle Stuart C. Rosewarne
The ILO's Domestic Worker Convention (C189): Challenging the Gendered Disadvantage of Asia's Foreign Domestic Workers?
Global Labour Journal
Domestic Worker Convention
globalisation
International Labour Organization
migrant domestic worker
author_facet Stuart C. Rosewarne
author_sort Stuart C. Rosewarne
title The ILO's Domestic Worker Convention (C189): Challenging the Gendered Disadvantage of Asia's Foreign Domestic Workers?
title_short The ILO's Domestic Worker Convention (C189): Challenging the Gendered Disadvantage of Asia's Foreign Domestic Workers?
title_full The ILO's Domestic Worker Convention (C189): Challenging the Gendered Disadvantage of Asia's Foreign Domestic Workers?
title_fullStr The ILO's Domestic Worker Convention (C189): Challenging the Gendered Disadvantage of Asia's Foreign Domestic Workers?
title_full_unstemmed The ILO's Domestic Worker Convention (C189): Challenging the Gendered Disadvantage of Asia's Foreign Domestic Workers?
title_sort ilo's domestic worker convention (c189): challenging the gendered disadvantage of asia's foreign domestic workers?
publisher McMaster University Library Press
series Global Labour Journal
issn 1918-6711
publishDate 2013-01-01
description The International Labour Organization's Domestic Worker Convention, resolved in June 2011 and soon to come into force, is regarded as a watershed in the struggle by a host of civil society groups to get paid domestic work formally recognised, draw such work out of the shadows and secure employment rights and protections for this overwhelmingly female workforce. In covering all paid domestic work, the Convention can also be seen as an important initiative in promoting decent work for migrant workers and especially the many recruited from Southeast Asia and South Asia. However, improvements in employment rights and conditions will likely be frustrated by the inadequacies of the ILO as a global institutional force able to engage member nation states as well as by the entrenched structural inequities in international labour markets marked by barriers based on gender, race and ethnicity, nationality and religion and irregular employment. Progress will depend on the effectiveness of those civil society groups which were instrumental in the negotiation of the Convention to maintain the momentum to break down the barriers and states' reluctance to implement measures that abolish labour market disadvantage.
topic Domestic Worker Convention
globalisation
International Labour Organization
migrant domestic worker
url https://mulpress.mcmaster.ca/globallabour/article/view/1126
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