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Between Coercion and Empowerment Christa Wichterich 24.08.07, FES, Berlin. Women in International Migration Regimes. New International Division of Labour. Restructuring Of Economies. Globalisierung Migration. Cross-Border Movement. Commodi- fication.
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Between Coercion and Empowerment Christa Wichterich 24.08.07, FES, Berlin Women in International Migration Regimes
New International Division of Labour Restructuring Of Economies Globalisierung Migration Cross-Border Movement Commodi- fication
Migration = Gendered Process … mediated by gendered norms, stereotypes, expectations, opportunities … demand for gender specific labour e.g. domestics … supply of gender specific labour e.g. nurses migration process itself is gendered… women more vulnerable Integration process is gendered Re-integration is gendered… cultural & social repercussions
Complex & Changing Nexus of Push & Pull Economic crisis, loss of livelihood, poverty Change in domestic labour market, men loose jobs, new gender roles Discrimination, lack of chances Coercion Hope for a good life Demand of labour e.g. IT sector & care of the elderly selective strategy of opening of borders & inclusion Transnational networks of migrants offer jobs to people at home Migration industry: Labour agencies, brokers & traffickers make false promises & lure women into slavery
Why? Global reason: inequalities between countries Individual reason: Poverty, loss of livelihood, economic crisis, conflict, violence, cultural norms Survival Strategy: Search for livelihood, security & rights Distinction: voluntary forced … … coercion & choice are interlinked Agents of their life, decision makers regarding their future
Latest Trends in Migration More temporary and circular More illegal More gendered or female More polarised: skilled & unskilled Less share of refugees
Feminisation of Transnat. Migration- Figures - 1980 1990 2000 2005 Number of Migrants (mio) 99.7 154.0 174.9 191.0 Women 47.1 73.8 85.0 94.5 % of Women 47.2 47.9 48.6 49.6 + 200 mio migrants within China
Feminisation of Migration Change in goal: Earlier majority of women migrated as dependent family members (marriage, family unification) – now migrate as wage earners on their own More visible in statistics & in public Specific female flows of migrant workers Gender segregated labour market: Mostly unskilled informal jobs, new international division of labour
Global Care Chain 1) Nurses & doctors trained in the Philippines work in Saudi Arabia brain drain lack of medical personal in the Philippines 2) Middle-class women in the US, full time em-ployed, transfers care work in the household to undocumented migrant from Mexico whose chil-dren are taken care of by a relative care drain new internat. division of care work 3) Private households in Germany employ care takers from Poland for elderly & sick people often deskilling, rotation or shuttle system
Contradictory Discourses & Policies Building new external borders & internal barriers fear of competition in domestic labour market, xenophobia, racism Shift in discourse: focus on economic advantage: - for the home country: export of unemployment, remittances development effect, poverty reduction - for the receiving country: selective demand, supply of labour for specific sectors
Remittances 2005: 232 bill. US $ official money transfers 167 bill. US $ for developing countries Huge profits for financial service sector due to high fees for transnational money transfer (up to 20 %) Women: less income, remit higher share than men - temporary migrants remit more - depends on family relations Gender specific use of remittances: - men invest in consumer goods, - women invest in human development
Social Costs & Gains Violation of human rights, racism Sexual violence Lack of access to social security & health Wage discrimination, deskilling, downgrading Social remittances: conservative values Brain/skills/care drain Recognition as breadwin-ner for the family Personal freedom far away from family & cultural regime New transnational fami-lies, communities & networks Social remittances: liberal values Brain gain
Trafficking Trafficking = recruitment & transport “by means of threat, use of force or other forms of coercion” Presently 2,45 mio people enslaved + annually 1,2 mio people trafficked …. 80 % girls & women Main sectors of destination: prostitution, forced marriage, labour in sweatshops & agriculture No clear distinction between forced & voluntary migration
Refugees, Displaced & Asylum Seekers 12,7 mio refugees (2005) = 7 % of all migrants 90 % of all refugees stay in developing countries Women lack physical safety & security during flight & in camps 773.500 asylum seekers Growing awareness of gender specific reasons for asylum However, little progress in gender specific asylum procedures
New Transnational Spaces for Women New neoliberal regimes of migration management, policies of selective opening of borders & integration, informed by demand of markets Individual practices & subjectivities between exploitation & empowerment
Assumptions for Policies Consider migration as survival strategy & each migrant women as actor who struggles for livelihood & rights Migration is there to stay as long as inequality prevails Each human being has “a right to have rights” Search for concept of global citizenship & cosmopolitical rights Struggle against social & economic inequality & against poverty