Literature review on Foreign Domestic Work and Intersectionality developing an argument
Women and Globalization
Using at-least five readings with at-least two readings from outside the course write a literature review on Foreign Domestic Work and Intersectionality developing an argument. You are encouraged to use good academic sources –peer reviewed journal articles and/or reputed books. Propose a hypothesis/research question that emerges from your review. The Essay is approx. 1500 words in length
You must provide references for the concepts, ideas, examples, and direct/ indirect quotes taken from the readings. Format your essay in a standard 12-point font, double-spaced. Write in standard essay form and use APA style for citation and referencing.
3 References need to be used from the course. This is the list of course references:
- Caraway, T.L (2005) “ThePolitical Economy of Feminization: From ‘Cheap Labour’to Gendered Discourses of Work”, Politics & Gender 1(3),399-429.
- Elson, Diane and Ruth Pearson (1997) “The Subordination of Women and the Internationalization of Factory Production”in Nalini Vishvanathan, Lynn Duggan, Laurie Nisonoff and Nan Wiegersma (eds.) The Women, Gender and Development Reader, Zed books Ltd. (pp.191-202) London and NewJersey.
- Glenn, Evelyn Nakano (2002)“Integrating Race and Gender” in Evelyn Nakano GlennUnequal Freedom: How Race and Gender Shaped American Citizenship and Labor (pp. 6-17). Cambridge, Mass: Harvard UniversityPress
- Hanley, Jill; Lindsay Larios And Jah-Hon Koo (2017) “Does Canada “Care” aboutMigrant Caregivers: Implications under the Reformed Caregiver Program.” Canadian Ethnic Studies/Études ethniques au Canada; Vol. 49(2),121-139.
- James, Deborah, (2000) “Fair Trade, Not Free Trade”, in Danaher, Kevin and Roger Burbach (eds.) Globalize This! The Battle Against the World Trade Organization and Corporate Rule, (pp 188-194) Common Courage Press, ManroeMaine.
6.Lim Linda Y. C. (1990) “Women’s Work in Export Factories: The Politics of a Cause” in Irene Tinker (ed.) Persistent Inequalities, Women and World Development (pp.101-119) Oxford University Press,Oxford.
- Macklin, Audrey (1994) “On the Inside Looking In: Foreign Domestic Workers in Canada” in Wenona Giles and Sedaf Arat-Koc (eds.) Maid in the Market: Women’s Paid Domestic Labour, (pp.13-39), Fernwood Publishing,Halifax.
- Mirchandani, Kiran (2004) “Practices of global capital: gaps, cracks and ironies incall centres in India”, Global Networks, 4(4),355-373.
- Mohanty, Talpade (2003) “Under Western Eyes” Revisited: Feminist Solidarity through Anticapitalist Struggles” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 28 (2),499-535.
- Parreñas, Rhacel Salazar (2001) “Mothering from a Distance: Emotion. Gender and Inter-Generational Relations in Filipino Transnational Families”, Feminist Studies, 27 (2), 361-390.
- Rose, Kalima (1997) “SEWA: Women in Movement” in Nalini Vishvanathan, Lynn Duggan, Laurie Nisonoff andNan Wiegersma (eds.) The Women, Gender and Development Reader (pp. 382-386), Zed books Ltd., London and NewJersey.
- Soni-Sinha,Urvashi(2006)“WherearetheWomen?”Gender,LaborandDiscourseinNoida Export Processing Zone and Delhi”, Feminist Economics. 12 (3),335-366.
- Wishterich, Christa (2000) “Introduction” in Christa Wishterich The Globalized Woman: Reports from a Future of Inequality, translated by Camiller, Patrick, Spinex Press, Australia, Zed books, London, ppvii-ix.