3,063 research outputs found

    Go After the Women : Mothers Against Illegal Aliens\u27 Campaign Against Mexican Immigrant Women and Their Children

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    Symposium: Latinos and Latinas at the Epicenter of Contemporary Legal Discourses. Indiana University School of Law-Bloomington, March 2007

    Unraveling Privilege: Workers\u27 Children and the Hidden Cost of Paid Childcare

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    In this Article, Romero argues that individual solutions to the problem of childcare in the United States results in hidden costs of paid reproductive labor that is transferred to the families of private household workers and nannies. Without a nationally funded childcare program that provides services for all families, regardless of economic means or citizenship status, employers are unwilling to pay a living wage and benefits to workers. Socially appropriate mothering prescribed by childcare experts, advocates child-centered, emotionally demanding, labor-intensive, and financially draining methods. The substitute mothering that is currently purchased by hiring domestics and nannies transfers the more physical and taxing part of childcare to the workers while employers upgrade their own status to mother-managers. Interviews conducted with the adult children of domestics and nannies demonstrate the social reproduction of difference in both employee and employer families. Private childcare arrangements provide a significant social space for reproducing inequality between families and for teaching children about privilege, as well as their place in the gendered, racialized, and class-based social hierarchy. Reproducing the contemporary middle-class family with all its current privileges, requires vulnerable workers who are stigmatized in the labor force by their citizenship and economic status (and frequently racialized) in order to retain an unequal distribution of reproductive labor at the societal level. Childcare policies and programs that are not inclusive of all mothers, regardless of class, race, or citizenship, maintain a system of privileges that relies on subordination

    Unraveling Privilege: Workers\u27 Children and the Hidden Cost of Paid Childcare

    Get PDF
    In this Article, Romero argues that individual solutions to the problem of childcare in the United States results in hidden costs of paid reproductive labor that is transferred to the families of private household workers and nannies. Without a nationally funded childcare program that provides services for all families, regardless of economic means or citizenship status, employers are unwilling to pay a living wage and benefits to workers. Socially appropriate mothering prescribed by childcare experts, advocates child-centered, emotionally demanding, labor-intensive, and financially draining methods. The substitute mothering that is currently purchased by hiring domestics and nannies transfers the more physical and taxing part of childcare to the workers while employers upgrade their own status to mother-managers. Interviews conducted with the adult children of domestics and nannies demonstrate the social reproduction of difference in both employee and employer families. Private childcare arrangements provide a significant social space for reproducing inequality between families and for teaching children about privilege, as well as their place in the gendered, racialized, and class-based social hierarchy. Reproducing the contemporary middle-class family with all its current privileges, requires vulnerable workers who are stigmatized in the labor force by their citizenship and economic status (and frequently racialized) in order to retain an unequal distribution of reproductive labor at the societal level. Childcare policies and programs that are not inclusive of all mothers, regardless of class, race, or citizenship, maintain a system of privileges that relies on subordination

    Revisiting Outcrits with a Sociological Imagination

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    Immigration, the Servant Problem, and the Legacy of the Domestic Labor Debate: Where Can You Find Good Help These Days!

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    Nanny Diaries and Other Stories: Immigrant Women’s Labor in the Social Reproduction of American Families

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    Two former nannies employed on the Upper East Side of Manhattan offer this want ad as an illustration of employers’ expectations and working conditions awaiting potential employees. Although it is a fictionalized account of their total six-year experience as nannies while attending college, Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus’ The Nanny Diaries, A Novel has spurred significant attention from the media. Editorials, letters to the editor, book reviews, and talk shows featuring the authors and the ..
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