1. Introduction; Part I. The Context: 2. Key concepts in stepwise international labor migration; 3. Origin stories; 4. Global but uneven: the market for migrant domestic workers; Part II. The Actors: 5. Stepwise journeys, compared and contrasted; 6. The world according to migrant domestic workers; 7. Inside the stepwise migrant's suitcase; 8. The agents of stepwise migration; Part III. The Aftermath: 9. The end of the road; 10. Conclusion.
Explores how global markets, middlemen and destination aspirations drive the 'stepwise migrations' of Filipino and Indonesian migrant domestic workers.
Anju Mary Paul is Associate Professor of Sociology and Public Policy at Yale-NUS College in Singapore. She is an international migration scholar with a research focus on migration to, from and within Asia, and is especially interested in how gender, labour, race and ethnicity, as well as class, intersect at the moment of migration and the post-migration experience. Her research spans the migrations of low-wage Asian migrant domestic workers and high-skilled Asian-born, Western-trained bioscientists. She has published sole-authored articles in the American Journal of Sociology, Social Forces, Migration Studies, and the Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies.
'Multinational Maids wonderfully weaves together the lived
experience of domestic workers, the dynamics of global labour
markets, and new frontiers in migration theory.' Jørgen Carling,
Peace Research Institute Oslo
'Anju Mary Paul offers a highly accessible and insightful study of
global migration that is ambitious in scale and rich in detail.
Drawing from large-scale surveys and interviews, Multinational
Maids draws linkages between global locations ranging from
Singapore to Saudi, and illuminates the processes, patterns,
ambitions, imaginaries and accidents of fate, that lead some
migrant workers to seek ever-better migratory destinations.' Nicole
Constable, University of Pittsburgh
'… domestic workers make decisions, gather resources, and deal with
constraints to access the best possible destinations in the global
labor market. Based on multi-sited and multi-method approaches
comparing Filipino and Indonesian domestic workers, the findings
show how, following their first migration, the search for their
dream destination can take migrant domestic workers to more than
one destination country over several migration attempts. The search
is fraught with uncertainties and difficulties, but as this
impressive work concludes, 'What this book demonstrates is the
drive and ingenuity of temporary labor migrants long before they
have reached their end-destination'.' Marla Asis, Scalabrini
Migration Center, Philippines
'This book is an important examination of contemporary
international migration, as it presents a necessary and timely
challenge to the prevailing paradigms of permanent settlement and
binational approach to transnationalism. … this is an important
book that not only challenges dominant paradigms in migration
studies but, more importantly, invites further theorizations of the
under-studied phenomenon of multinational migration.' Maria Cecilia
Hwang, Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia
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