印度家庭工作中的非正式工作与社会再生产的占有

IF 3.3 2区 经济学 Q1 ECONOMICS
Natascia Boeri
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在家工作是印度非正规经济中最大的就业形式之一,妇女占绝大多数。本文采用了一个重新定义劳动的社会再生产框架,询问女性的无报酬工作活动如何在分包的家庭工作中被视为劳动。应用这一分析框架,很明显,由于护理的性别结构,在这一生产过程中需要并利用通常由妇女完成的家务劳动。出资考虑了资本如何直接将无偿工作作为剩余价值进行分配。非正规工作的背景在这里是关键,因为生产过程不规则且分散,工作发生的空间,以及使用无报酬的家庭工人。本研究的目标是提供实证证据,拓宽分析视角,以解释全球南方非正规性的背景。亮点印度的分包家庭工作依赖于性别化、分散和不稳定的劳动力。无偿护理和家务劳动直接促进了盈利。西方的经济分析概念需要在后殖民非正规经济的背景下重新审视。衡量经济参与度的研究工具需要了解无偿活动如何直接或间接地促进经济进程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Informal Work and the Appropriation of Social Reproduction in Home-Based Work in India
Home-based work is among the largest forms of employment in the informal economy in India and is overwhelmingly represented by women. Employing a social reproduction framework that reframes what is counted as labor, this article asks how women’s unpaid work activities are appropriated as labor in subcontracted home-based work. Applying this analytical framework, it becomes clear that domestic work in the home, often completed by women, is needed and exploited in this production process as a result of gendered constructs of care. The contribution considers how unpaid work is directly appropriated by capital as surplus value. The context of informal work is key here because of the irregular and fragmented production process, the space where work occurs, and the use of unpaid family workers. The goal of this research is to offer empirical evidence that broadens analytical perspectives to account for the context of informality in the Global South. HIGHLIGHTS Subcontracted home-based work in India relies on a gendered, fragmented, and precarious labor force. Unpaid caregiving and household work directly contributes to profit-making. Western analytical concepts of the economy need to be reexamined in the context of the postcolonial informal economies. Research tools that measure economic participation need to capture how unpaid activities directly or indirectly contribute to economic processes.
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来源期刊
Feminist Economics
Feminist Economics Multiple-
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
4.30%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: Feminist Economics is a peer-reviewed journal that provides an open forum for dialogue and debate about feminist economic perspectives. By opening new areas of economic inquiry, welcoming diverse voices, and encouraging critical exchanges, the journal enlarges and enriches economic discourse. The goal of Feminist Economics is not just to develop more illuminating theories but to improve the conditions of living for all children, women, and men. Feminist Economics: -Advances feminist inquiry into economic issues affecting the lives of children, women, and men -Examines the relationship between gender and power in the economy and the construction and legitimization of economic knowledge -Extends feminist theoretical, historical, and methodological contributions to economics and the economy -Offers feminist insights into the underlying constructs of the economics discipline and into the historical, political, and cultural context of economic knowledge -Provides a feminist rethinking of theory and policy in diverse fields, including those not directly related to gender -Stimulates discussions among diverse scholars worldwide and from a broad spectrum of intellectual traditions, welcoming cross-disciplinary and cross-country perspectives, especially from countries in the South
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