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“When We Fight, We Win”: Migrant Domestic Worker Organizing and Engaged Intersectional Research in Canada
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Shaw, Jennifer E. (Author)
- Minh, Anita (Author)
- Massie, Alicia (Author)
- Bagon, Cenen (Author)
- Cordero, Kassandra (Author)
- Mũrage, Alice (Author)
- Calamba, Rincy Dominic C. (Author)
- Rosario Martinez, Noemi (Author)
Title
“When We Fight, We Win”: Migrant Domestic Worker Organizing and Engaged Intersectional Research in Canada
Abstract
Migrant domestic workers have formed the backbone of Canada's care economy, filling gaps in care and performing this undervalued work since the inception of the settler-colonial state. Premilla Nadasen (2023) argues that the care economy is not only subject to the sexist devaluation of women's reproductive work but is rooted in slavery and the racist extraction of work that makes all other work possible. Nadasen also points to the history of resistance, noting that care work has not only been a site of oppression but also a site of resistance. In Canada, stories of exploitation and activist-led change in the care sector have unfolded over two centuries. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, British women were brought to Canada as nannies. Fitting the image of the white nation brazenly embodied in immigration policies, these white women were provided permanent status on arrival. When the post-World War II period brought larger gaps in care, the Canadian state initiated the West Indian Domestic Scheme in 1955.... --Introduction
Publication
International Feminist Journal of Politics
Publisher
Routledge
Date
2026
Volume
28
Issue
1
Pages
202-224
Accessed
2/3/26, 9:53 PM
ISSN
1461-6742
Language
English
Citation
Shaw, J. E., Minh, A., Massie, A., Bagon, C., Cordero, K., Mũrage, A., Calamba, R. D. C., & Rosario Martinez, N. (2026). “When We Fight, We Win”: Migrant Domestic Worker Organizing and Engaged Intersectional Research in Canada. International Feminist Journal of Politics, 28(1), 202–224. https://doi.org/10.1080/14616742.2025.2610234
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