2019
DOI: 10.25159/2520-3223/5872
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Domestic workers’ lived realities of empowerment and disempowerment within the South African labour legislative context: Two sides of the same “coin”

Abstract: South Africa is heralded as a global ambassador for the rights of domestic workers. Empowerment, however, remains an elusive concept within the sector. Fear-based disempowerment still characterises the employment relationship, resulting in an absence of an employee voice. The dire need to survive renders this sector silent. This article explores the role that legislative awareness can play in the everyday lives of domestic workers. By means of a post-positive, forwardlooking positive psychological and phenomen… Show more

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“…Domestic labour is an uncomfortable relationship to participate in. The asymmetrical nature of the relationship is often displayed through unspoken boundaries, rules and resistance related to space (Dickey, 2000; Murray and Lambert, 2019), food (Archer, 2011) and in cases of possible confrontation and its avoidance (Marais and Van Wyk, 2015; Murray and Durrheim, 2019b). So much of this relationship is navigated in the realms of the ambiguous, the unspoken, the implied, the invisible and the silent (Archer, 2011; Murray and Durrheim, 2019b).…”
Section: The Case Of the Status Quo In Paid Domestic Labourmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Domestic labour is an uncomfortable relationship to participate in. The asymmetrical nature of the relationship is often displayed through unspoken boundaries, rules and resistance related to space (Dickey, 2000; Murray and Lambert, 2019), food (Archer, 2011) and in cases of possible confrontation and its avoidance (Marais and Van Wyk, 2015; Murray and Durrheim, 2019b). So much of this relationship is navigated in the realms of the ambiguous, the unspoken, the implied, the invisible and the silent (Archer, 2011; Murray and Durrheim, 2019b).…”
Section: The Case Of the Status Quo In Paid Domestic Labourmentioning
confidence: 99%