Female labor migration and the restructuring of migration discourse: a study of female workers from Chitwan, Nepal

Doctor of Philosophy === Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work === Laszlo Kulcsar === Nepali women are often barred from going abroad through discriminatory state policies, and the women engaging in foreign employment are generally perceived as "loose" women in Nepalese so...

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Main Author: Kharel, Arjun
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/32662
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-326622017-03-04T03:51:20Z Female labor migration and the restructuring of migration discourse: a study of female workers from Chitwan, Nepal Kharel, Arjun Migration Female Migration Nepal Discourse Housemaids Gulf Doctor of Philosophy Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work Laszlo Kulcsar Nepali women are often barred from going abroad through discriminatory state policies, and the women engaging in foreign employment are generally perceived as "loose" women in Nepalese society. The female migrant workers are also represented as lacking "agency" and "victims" of sex trafficking in the Nepalese media. Despite the unfavorable socio-political contexts, a substantial number of Nepali women have engaged in transnational labor migration in the last two decades, often "illegally" by using the open Nepal-India border to reach the destination countries. The study investigates the impact of women's migration on the dominant discourse relating to female workers' sexuality and agency by analyzing the experiences of female workers from Chitwan, Nepal, who have returned after working as housemaids in the Persian Gulf. The study finds that the dominant discourse is both contested and reproduced during the emigration process and after the return of female workers. However, the dominant discourse is overall restructured in the emigrant communities due to women's participation in foreign employment and return with diverse experiences. As women's varied migration experiences are hardly reported in the national media, the discursive change in the local communities does not necessarily bring a (similar) change in the national discourse. While violence prevailed against female workers in the Gulf, most acts of violence were indirect and non-physical. The extreme forms of violence, such as physical and sexual abuses, which are usually reported in the media, were somewhat uncommon. The major complaints of the respondents were low wages, withholding and non-payment of wages, withholding of passport, extremely long hours of work, constant criticism, lack of adequate rest, and the feeling of confinement. The violence against the housemaids was largely facilitated by the sponsorship-based labor recruitment system in the Gulf that bound the migrant workers with their employers. At the micro level, the living arrangement (having to live with the employers) was also a contributing factor to violence against the female workers. The female workers who were employed in a household with multiple housemaids were less likely to experience violence than those who were the only maid in the employer's house. 2016-04-22T21:25:54Z 2016-04-22T21:25:54Z 2016 May Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2097/32662 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Migration
Female Migration
Nepal
Discourse
Housemaids
Gulf
spellingShingle Migration
Female Migration
Nepal
Discourse
Housemaids
Gulf
Kharel, Arjun
Female labor migration and the restructuring of migration discourse: a study of female workers from Chitwan, Nepal
description Doctor of Philosophy === Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work === Laszlo Kulcsar === Nepali women are often barred from going abroad through discriminatory state policies, and the women engaging in foreign employment are generally perceived as "loose" women in Nepalese society. The female migrant workers are also represented as lacking "agency" and "victims" of sex trafficking in the Nepalese media. Despite the unfavorable socio-political contexts, a substantial number of Nepali women have engaged in transnational labor migration in the last two decades, often "illegally" by using the open Nepal-India border to reach the destination countries. The study investigates the impact of women's migration on the dominant discourse relating to female workers' sexuality and agency by analyzing the experiences of female workers from Chitwan, Nepal, who have returned after working as housemaids in the Persian Gulf. The study finds that the dominant discourse is both contested and reproduced during the emigration process and after the return of female workers. However, the dominant discourse is overall restructured in the emigrant communities due to women's participation in foreign employment and return with diverse experiences. As women's varied migration experiences are hardly reported in the national media, the discursive change in the local communities does not necessarily bring a (similar) change in the national discourse. While violence prevailed against female workers in the Gulf, most acts of violence were indirect and non-physical. The extreme forms of violence, such as physical and sexual abuses, which are usually reported in the media, were somewhat uncommon. The major complaints of the respondents were low wages, withholding and non-payment of wages, withholding of passport, extremely long hours of work, constant criticism, lack of adequate rest, and the feeling of confinement. The violence against the housemaids was largely facilitated by the sponsorship-based labor recruitment system in the Gulf that bound the migrant workers with their employers. At the micro level, the living arrangement (having to live with the employers) was also a contributing factor to violence against the female workers. The female workers who were employed in a household with multiple housemaids were less likely to experience violence than those who were the only maid in the employer's house.
author Kharel, Arjun
author_facet Kharel, Arjun
author_sort Kharel, Arjun
title Female labor migration and the restructuring of migration discourse: a study of female workers from Chitwan, Nepal
title_short Female labor migration and the restructuring of migration discourse: a study of female workers from Chitwan, Nepal
title_full Female labor migration and the restructuring of migration discourse: a study of female workers from Chitwan, Nepal
title_fullStr Female labor migration and the restructuring of migration discourse: a study of female workers from Chitwan, Nepal
title_full_unstemmed Female labor migration and the restructuring of migration discourse: a study of female workers from Chitwan, Nepal
title_sort female labor migration and the restructuring of migration discourse: a study of female workers from chitwan, nepal
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/32662
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