Caribbean street vending experiences: Guyanese migrant women in Trinidad and Tobago

被引:0
|
作者
Collins, Tivia [1 ]
Gahman, Levi [2 ]
机构
[1] Wake Forest Univ, Ringgold Standard Inst, Womens Gender & Sexual Studies, Winston Salem, NC 27109 USA
[2] Univ Liverpool, Ringgold Stand Inst, Geog & Planning, Liverpool, England
关键词
Migrant women; Guyana; street vending; Trinidad and Tobago; Caribbean migration; MIGRATION; POLITICS; GENDER; CITIZENSHIP; INTERVIEW; VIOLENCE; VENDORS; TRADE;
D O I
10.1080/1369183X.2024.2395391
中图分类号
C921 [人口统计学];
学科分类号
摘要
This article offers a critical overview of how South-South migration operates in the Caribbean. It represents an intersectional feminist analysis of the experiences of Guyanese migrant women who work as street vendors in Trinidad and Tobago. Via the use of narrative inquiry, the study examines the daily challenges migrant women face as they interact with state officials, police officers, customers, and other vendors. We also provide a summary of the individual and collective tactics migrant women employ to navigate a context in which they are often stigmatised, marked as Other, and experience multiple barriers to be able to make a living. In doing so, the piece details how sexism, xenophobia and racism are mutually constituted and function in a Caribbean context, as well as how interlocking systems of oppression create barriers for migrant women to secure sustainable livelihood. We also illustrate the political agency of Guyanese migrant women by highlighting the ways they co-create safe spaces and build community despite obstacles. This article contributes to critical migration studies from the Global South/Majority World, fosters greater regional consciousness across the Caribbean, and underscores the importance of centring migrant women's experiences in research and scholarship.
引用
收藏
页码:306 / 323
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Trance and Modernity in the Southern Caribbean: African and Hindu Popular Religions in Trinidad and Tobago
    Bakker, Freek L.
    NOVA RELIGIO-JOURNAL OF ALTERNATIVE AND EMERGENT RELIGIONS, 2013, 17 (01): : 105 - 106
  • [42] ORGAN DONATION IN A DEVELOPING CARIBBEAN COUNTRY: A SINGLE CENTRE EXPERIENCE IN TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
    Mohammed, Hassina
    Paredes-Zapata, David
    De Freitas, Loren
    TRANSPLANT INTERNATIONAL, 2021, 34 : 242 - 242
  • [43] Trends in extreme temperature and precipitation indices for the Caribbean small islands: Trinidad and Tobago
    Nalini Dookie
    Xsitaaz T. Chadee
    Ricardo M. Clarke
    Theoretical and Applied Climatology, 2019, 136 : 31 - 44
  • [45] Exploring the Experiences of Females on Reporting Incidents of Domestic Violence in Trinidad and Tobago
    Johnson, Emmanuel Janagan
    Boodram, Cheryl Ann Sarita
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK, 2019, 49 (08): : 2226 - 2244
  • [46] Current Affairs for Women in Physics at the Postsecondary Level in Trinidad and Tobago
    Tanner, Kandice
    Haque, Shirin
    WOMEN IN PHYSICS: 3RD IUPAP INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON WOMEN IN PHYSICS, 2009, 1119 : 179 - +
  • [47] Teleworking the Mobile Caribbean: Enabling Remote Work Among the Marginalized in Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago
    Dunn, Hopeton S.
    INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES & INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, 2009, 5 (02): : 52 - 66
  • [48] Sex trafficking in the Caribbean: A comparative analysis of policy responses in the Dominican Republic and Trinidad and Tobago
    Hem-Lee-Forsyth, Shivaughn
    Viechweg, N'Diera
    Estevez, Eden
    Walcott-Pierre, Terrisha
    Wong, Lauren
    WORLD MEDICAL & HEALTH POLICY, 2024, 16 (04): : 600 - 617
  • [49] Wind resources and the levelized cost of wind generated electricity in the Caribbean islands of Trinidad and Tobago
    Chadee, Xsitaaz T.
    Clarke, Ricardo M.
    RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS, 2018, 81 : 2526 - 2540
  • [50] Canada Comes to CARIFESTA: The Caribbean International Festival of the Arts, Trinidad and Tobago, August 2019
    Knowles, Ric
    CANADIAN THEATRE REVIEW, 2020, 182 : 77 - 81