Marginalized and Dissident Non-Citizens: Foreign Domestic Workers

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Marginalized and Dissident Non-Citizens: Foreign Domestic Workers
Abstract
The systemic reproduction of migrant domestics as non-citizens within the countries where they work and reside renders them in a meaningful sense stateless, as far as access to state protection of their rights is concerned. This is despite the formal retention of legal citizenship status accorded by their home country, and, often, the legal entry as non-citizen migrant workers in the host country. In previous chapters, we have identified how the construction of non-citizenship is central to maintaining the vulnerability of foreign domestic workers in Canada. In this chapter, we consider the lived experiences of domestic workers themselves, based largely on a survey of foreign domestic workers living in Toronto. This chapter offers a comparative analysis of the experiences of two groups of women of colour, those of West Indian and Filipino origin, working in the homes of upper-middle- and upper-class Canadian families resident in Toronto, Ontario in the mid-1990s.
Book Title
Negotiating Citizenship: Migrant Women in Canada and the Global System
Place
Toronto
Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Date
2005
Pages
86-106
Language
English
ISBN
0-8020-7915-6
Library Catalog
Library of Congress ISBN
Call Number
HD6072.2.C2 S83 2005
Citation
Stasiulis, D. K., & Bakan, A. B. (2005). Marginalized and Dissident Non-Citizens: Foreign Domestic Workers. In Negotiating Citizenship: Migrant Women in Canada and the Global System (pp. 86–106). University of Toronto Press. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/267926937_Marginalized_and_Dissident_Non-Citizens_Foreign_Domestic_Workers