2020
DOI: 10.1111/gwao.12536
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Brazilian housemaids and COVID‐19: How can they isolate if domestic work stems from racism?

Abstract: This article proposes a debate about the situation of Brazilian housemaids in the context of the COVID‐19 pandemic to expand the discussion on this scenario and link it structurally to racism and the history of colonialism, from the perspective of its successful project of establishing racial inequalities and relegating Black women to the most vulnerable conditions. As staying at home is not a choice for these women, the suppression of the right to life reflects how the necropolitics against Black Brazilians o… Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…For instance, the spike in anti-Asian sentiments and crimes in the US, rising anti-Muslim discrimination in the Americas and India, health disparities for people of color (esp in settler-colonial contexts such as the US, UK, Australia), and ageism and ableism globally. Precarious workers, often racial minorities or impoverished members of a community, such as those in domestic service, migrant laborers, farmworkers, food preparers, were particularly hard hit when businesses shut down or they were pushed out of their jobs (Swan, 2020), or were forced to continue to work under risky circumstances (Teixeira, 2020). Many precarious labor force workers were unable to send remittances to their families overseas or were forced to leave their countries of employment; ethnic minorities and migrants have faced greater exposures from crowded living arrangements, lack of healthcare access, stigmatization and exclusion based on race, ethnicity, and migrant status (International Organisation on Migration (IOM), 2020).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, the spike in anti-Asian sentiments and crimes in the US, rising anti-Muslim discrimination in the Americas and India, health disparities for people of color (esp in settler-colonial contexts such as the US, UK, Australia), and ageism and ableism globally. Precarious workers, often racial minorities or impoverished members of a community, such as those in domestic service, migrant laborers, farmworkers, food preparers, were particularly hard hit when businesses shut down or they were pushed out of their jobs (Swan, 2020), or were forced to continue to work under risky circumstances (Teixeira, 2020). Many precarious labor force workers were unable to send remittances to their families overseas or were forced to leave their countries of employment; ethnic minorities and migrants have faced greater exposures from crowded living arrangements, lack of healthcare access, stigmatization and exclusion based on race, ethnicity, and migrant status (International Organisation on Migration (IOM), 2020).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More than considering the technological infrastructure to work at home, this study shows that certain sectors of the economy, such as the service industry, retailers, factory workers, and building workers, have shallow telework potential. Police officers (Alcadipani, 2020) and housemaids (Teixeira, 2020) are cases of this category already commented on here in this journal. Nevertheless, remote work should also be observed in the formal and informal sectors.…”
Section: Food Is Being Preparedmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…As a result, the polices generate administrative registers of police stops, but deny society access to them. Such opacity is then used to deny police racism and selectivity, by stating there is no such thing as approaching mostly black, poor, young men from the favelas, even though this has been confirmed as a pattern by academic research for decades (Feltran, 2010;Fridman, 2008;Holston, 2008;Misse, 2008;A. Teixeira, 2012), becoming part of the Brazilian collective consciousness.…”
Section: Secrecy About Police Proceduresmentioning
confidence: 99%