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El. knyga: Race, Gender and Contemporary International Labor Migration Regimes: 21st-Century Coolies?

  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Serija: Elgar Studies in Labour Law
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Dec-2022
  • Leidėjas: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781789902006
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Serija: Elgar Studies in Labour Law
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Dec-2022
  • Leidėjas: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781789902006

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Migrant workers around the world are subject to exploitative labor practices that give employers extraordinary bargaining power. This book brings together researchers, practitioners and advocates who explore the many ways that contracted migrant workers are rendered vulnerable in the workplace. In this book, the term “21st Century Coolie” is deployed as a heuristic that foregrounds the deeply unequal structures shaping the transnational flows of short-term, migrant workers. The term “coolie” harkens back to the labor arrangements of earlier centuries that involved conscripted labor, indentured servitude and contract labor across national borders. Like those of past centuries, today’s “coolies” are subject to legal constraints inside and outside the employment relationship that force them into subjugated positions within the workplace.



The chapters of this anthology situate contemporary global migration regimes in histories of colonization, uncover their racialized as well as gendered natices that give employers extraordinary bargaining power. This book brings together researchers, practitioners and advocates who explore the many ways that contracted migrant workers are rendered vulnerable in the workplace. In this book, the term ‘21st century coolie’ is deployed as a heuristic that foregrounds the deeply unequal structures shaping the transnational flows of short-term, migrant workers. The term ‘coolie’ harkens back to the labor arrangements of earlier centuries that involved conscripted labor, indentured servitude and contract labor across national borders. Like those of past centuries, today’s “coolies” are subject to legal constraints inside and outside the employment relationship that force them into subjugated positions within the workplace. ture, and examine the role of nation-states in perpetuating conditions of extreme exploitation. The permeability, mutability, and durability of racial capitalism is revealed through an interdisciplinary and practice-oriented lens.



Law and social science students in graduate courses on migration, labor, employment, employment discrimination, and race and the law will gain a deeper understanding of the issues facing migrant workers today, as will students in humanities, performance studies, narrative studies and communication studies.

List of figures
vii
List of tables
viii
List of contributors
ix
Series editor's preface x
PART I MIGRANT WORKERS, GLOBAL RACIAL CAPITALISM AND UNFREEDOM
1 Introduction to Race, Gender and Contemporary International Labor Migration Regimes
2(19)
Robyn Magalit Rodriguez
2 The narrative of ethno-racial labor competition and employee choice
21(14)
Leticia Saucedo
PART II THE RETURN OF THE BRACERO PROGRAM? H-VISA HOLDERS IN THE UNITED STATES
3 Bringing back the Bracero Program: the migration industry in the recruitment of H-2 visa workers
35(28)
Ruben Hernandez-Leon
Efren Sandoval Hernandez
Lidia E. Munoz Paniagua
4 Delegating discrimination in the temporary worker visa programs
63(27)
Jennifer J. Lee
Rachel Micah-Jones
5 Tech coolies: Indian scientists and engineers entering the United States on H-1B visas
90(22)
Roli Varma
PART III LEGAL AND ORGANIZING STRATEGIES FOR U.S. IMMIGRANT AND MIGRANT WORKERS
6 Workers with temporary protected status: the value and limits of delinking immigration and employment status
112(14)
Shannon Gleeson
Kati L. Griffith
7 Garment worker organizing in Los Angeles
126(6)
Mar Martinez
Mercedes Cortez
8 Emerging forms of organization for precarious migrant workers
132(22)
Ken Wang
PART IV DOMESTIC WORKERS AND THE POLITICS OF REPRESENTATION
9 Domestic workers and storytelling advocacy: competing visions of migrant worker organizing
154(22)
Sujatha Fernandes
10 Aesthetics of precarity: racial performativity in the archive of migrant domestic work
176(18)
Maria Eugenia Lopez-Garcia
PART V THE COMPLEXITIES OF GLOBAL PROCESSES FOR WORKERS
11 Sustaining inequality: the incorporation of migrant remittances in the Philippine political economy
194(25)
Suzy Lee
Index 219
Edited by Leticia Saucedo, Martin Luther King, Jr. Professor of Law, University of California, Davis School of Law and Robyn Magalit Rodriguez, Professor of Asian American Studies and Founding Director, Bulosan Center for Filipino Studies, University of California, Davis, US