Dying to Work: Oʻahu Hotel Workers’ Efforts at Well-being in the Face of Autoimmune Capitalism†

Pub Date : 2022-12-02 DOI:10.1111/awr.12243
Richard Cullen Rath, Monisha Das Gupta
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The settler colonial state of Hawaii has fostered tourism as its primary economic activity, despite its being only one-fifth to a quarter share of the economy. As a result, the push to reopen tourism in the face of COVID-19 pandemic conditions, which ground the industry to a near halt in 2020, has been acute. Based on our long-term involvement with UNITE HERE! Local 5 and our participation-observation of union members’ activities since May 2020, we examine worker-led safety protocols and practices to promote public health in the face of state and industry actors’ conscious exclusion of their expert knowledge in order to revive tourism. This exclusion put barriers in the way of hotel workers returning safely to their jobs and ultimately cost lives. We call this self-destructive urge “autoimmune capitalism,” an autophagic assemblage that consumes the mostly immigrant and Indigenous workers integral to the operation of tourism in the state. As tourism returns, hotel workers continue to organize for life-affirming practices even as their radical care to ensure community well-being gets absorbed as an invisible and uncompensated component of the pandemic service economy.

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渴望工作:面对自身免疫资本主义,欧胡岛酒店员工努力追求幸福
尽管旅游业只占经济的五分之一到四分之一,但移民殖民地夏威夷州将旅游业作为其主要的经济活动。因此,面对2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行的情况,重新开放旅游业的努力一直很紧迫,这使该行业在2020年几乎陷入停顿。基于我们与UNITE HERE的长期合作!Local 5和我们自2020年5月以来对工会成员活动的参与观察,我们研究了工人主导的安全协议和做法,以促进公共卫生,面对国家和行业行为者有意识地排除他们的专业知识,以重振旅游业。这种排斥给酒店工作人员安全返回工作岗位设置了障碍,并最终造成了生命损失。我们称这种自我毁灭的冲动为“自身免疫资本主义”,这是一种自噬的组合,消耗了该州旅游业不可或缺的移民和土著工人。随着旅游业的复苏,酒店工作人员继续组织积极的生活实践,即使他们为确保社区福祉而采取的激进护理措施被吸收为流行病服务经济的一个无形和无偿的组成部分。
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