Tales of two cities: legislating pregnancy and marriage among foreign domestic workers in Singapore and Hong Kong

被引:19
|
作者
Constable, Nicole [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Anthropol, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA
关键词
Migrant workers; law; marriage; pregnancy; exclusion;
D O I
10.1080/1369183X.2019.1592403
中图分类号
C921 [人口统计学];
学科分类号
摘要
This article compares the 'power geometry' (Massey [1994]. Space, Place and Gender. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press) of mobility/immobility of foreign domestic workers in Singapore and Hong Kong. In both contexts, the policing and surveillance of pregnancy and marriage reflect and reinforce power inequalities of gender paired with migratory, ethnic/racial and employment status. Pregnancy is considered incompatible with employment, but the specifics differ. In Singapore pregnancy results in automatic expulsion of the worker, while in Hong Kong workers are protected by antidiscrimination laws and some labour rights. Legislation of marriages to locals contrast greatly as well, producing subtle but significant differences in im/mobility and citizenship rights. These differences reveal unequal social positioning and different state priorities and regimes of control. While both states aim to restrict migrant workers, Confucian and familial notions of hierarchy reinforce Singapore's approach, while neoliberalism and individual responsibility play a greater role in Hong Kong.
引用
收藏
页码:3491 / 3507
页数:17
相关论文
共 49 条
  • [31] Much Ado About Nothing? Do Foreign Domestic Workers in Hong Kong Benefit From Capital Accumulation?
    Tong, Yuying
    Jiang, Niantao
    AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST, 2020, 64 (06) : 823 - 840
  • [32] Maids or mentors? The effects of live-in foreign domestic workers on children's educational achievement in Hong Kong
    Tang, Sam Hak Kan
    Yung, Linda Chor Wing
    EDUCATION ECONOMICS, 2016, 24 (01) : 96 - 120
  • [33] Social support and coping among female foreign domestic helpers experiencing abuse and exploitation in Hong Kong
    Choy, Chin Yung
    Chang, Leanne
    Man, Po Yee
    FRONTIERS IN COMMUNICATION, 2022, 7
  • [34] 'We spend more time with the children than they do ...': education, care and the work of foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong
    Yelland, Nicola
    Andrew, Yarrow
    Blaise, Mindy
    Chan, Yee On
    GLOBALISATION SOCIETIES AND EDUCATION, 2013, 11 (04) : 443 - 458
  • [35] Sexuality at Imagined Home: Same-Sex Desires among Indonesian Migrant Domestic Workers in Hong Kong
    Lai, Francisca Yuenki
    SEXUALITIES, 2018, 21 (5-6) : 899 - 913
  • [36] Support or burden? Mental health and transnational family contact among female migrant domestic workers in Hong Kong
    Lai, Yingtong
    Fong, Eric
    POPULATION SPACE AND PLACE, 2023, 29 (02)
  • [37] Abuse and depression among Filipino foreign domestic helpers. A cross-sectional survey in Hong Kong
    Cheung, J. T. K.
    Tsoi, V. W. Y.
    Wong, K. H. K.
    Chung, R. Y.
    PUBLIC HEALTH, 2019, 166 : 121 - 127
  • [38] Finding a Home Away from Home: An Explorative Study on the Use of Social Space with the Voices of Foreign Domestic Workers in Hong Kong
    Mok, King Him
    Ho, Hung Chak
    ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF GEOGRAPHERS, 2021, 111 (05) : 1403 - 1419
  • [39] "We also deserve help during the pandemic": The effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong
    Lui, Ingrid D.
    Vandan, Nimisha
    Davies, Sara E.
    Harman, Sophie
    Morgan, Rosemary
    Smith, Julia
    Wenham, Clare
    Grepin, Karen Ann
    JOURNAL OF MIGRATION AND HEALTH, 2021, 3
  • [40] A tale of two cities: A comparison of Hong Kong and Singapore's early strategies for the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
    De Deyn, Michelle Lee Zhi Qing
    Ng, Qin Xiang
    Loke, Wayren
    Yeo, Wee Song
    JOURNAL OF INFECTION, 2020, 81 (03) : E51 - E52