"在册 "但 "未记录"--职业伤害与移民妇女:经合组织国家的范围界定审查结果,以及对新西兰的影响

Kelly Radka, E. Wyeth, Brooke Craik, Christina R. Ergler, Sarah Derrett
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引用次数: 0

摘要

作为调查新西兰(NZ)移民工伤(WRI)经历的更广泛博士项目的一部分,我们对新西兰主流媒体关于移民工伤(WRI)的报道进行了审查,结果发现没有关于移民妇女工伤(WRI)经历的报道。进而,我们进行了一次范围审查,以确定报道经济合作与发展组织(OECD)成员国(包括新西兰)移民 WRI 经验和结果的实证研究结果的同行评审出版物。本文旨在确定并具体描述有关移民妇女的研究结果。在 2,243 份潜在出版物中,有 383 份进行了全文审查;最终有 67 份被保留下来。对这 67 篇出版物进行了审查,以确定专门针对因工受伤的移民妇女的研究结果;共发现 22 篇此类出版物(来自 21 项研究)。本文报告了:已确定研究的特点;其中移民妇女的特点;使用的框架和理论,以及与职业受伤移民妇女相关的知识(和差距)。这些出版物仅来自四个经合组织国家,即美国、加拿大、澳大利亚和西班牙。这些出版物确定了一系列研究设计和主题领域(工作条件、法律权利、身份、守门人的作用和不稳定性);然而,只有三项研究报告了关于妇女权利倡议的长期经验和成果的调查结果。九份出版物考虑了支持研究的理论模型,包括关于工作不稳定、污名化和公民身份的理论。然而,对 WRI 在整个生命过程中的经历进行分析的文章却很少,这凸显了对职业受伤移民妇女如何长期 "生活 "在这些经历中的理解存在差距。我们使用一个临时的 "matryoshka 框架叙事 "模型对范围审查的结果进行了综合,该模型将通过即将对职业受伤新西兰移民妇女进行的定性访谈进行完善。该模型强调了工伤事故经历中的多种影响因素,这些因素可能是移民妇女所特有的,这表明工伤事故的后果可能是不均衡的,移民妇女会经历不同的后果,而且可能会有更大的差异。这些发现推动了对知识差距的调查,并急需解决移徙妇女在妇女参与国际方面的潜在差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“On the books” yet “off the record”-occupational injury and migrant women: scoping review findings from OECD countries, with implications for New Zealand
Little appears to be known regarding the work-related injury (WRI) experiences of migrants (those born in a country other than their identified host country) and specifically, women migrants.As part of a wider PhD project investigating the WRI experiences of New Zealand (NZ) migrants, a review of NZ mainstream media coverage of migrants WRIs was undertaken, which identified no representations of migrant women's WRI experiences. In turn, a scoping review was undertaken to identify peer-reviewed publications reporting empirical findings about WRI experiences and outcomes for migrants in Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) member countries, including NZ. This paper aims to identify and describe findings for migrant women specifically. From 2,243 potential publications, 383 proceeded to full text review; ultimately 67 were retained. These 67 publications were reviewed to identify findings specifically for occupationally injured migrant women; 22 such publications (from 21 studies) were found. This paper reports: the characteristics of identified studies; characteristics of migrant women within; frameworks and theories used, and knowledge (and gaps) related to occupationally injured migrant women.Publications came from only four OECD countries, the United States, Canada, Australia, and Spain. A range of study designs, and topic areas (working conditions, legal rights, identities, the role of gatekeepers, and precarity), were identified; however, only three studies reported findings for longer-term experiences and outcomes of WRIs. Nine publications considered theoretical models underpinning research, including theories about precarious work, stigmatization, and citizenship. However, there was a paucity of analyses of the WRI experience throughout the life-course, highlighting a gap in understanding of how these experiences are “lived” over the long term by occupationally injured migrant women.Scoping review findings were synthesized using a provisional “matryoshka framing narrative” model, to be refined through forthcoming qualitative interviews with occupationally injured NZ migrant women. This model highlights the multitude of influences in WRI experiences, potentially specific to migrant women, suggesting the consequences of WRIs may be uneven, with migrant women experiencing different, and potentially, greater disparities in outcomes. These findings provide an impetus to investigate knowledge gaps and urgently address potential disparities in WRI outcomes for migrant women specifically.
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