2022
DOI: 10.1177/00187267221097937
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How is social inequality maintained in the Global South? Critiquing the concept of dirty work

Abstract: Extant research on dirty work—occupations involving physical, social or moral taint, which affect worker identities—has been read primarily through the lens of social identity theory (SIT). There are two notable shortcomings that emerge as a consequent of dirty work being too heavily reliant upon the precepts of SIT, which we seek to remedy in this article: (1) the overemphasis on the symbolic to the detriment of the material, which has led to false optimism regarding the ability for subjects doing dirty work … Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…Such first-order categories allowed us to find information in the interviews which allowed us to support the relevance of those categories through the iterative reading of the transcripts. Like Zulfiqar and Prasad (2022), we performed an iterative process which involved studying articles related to our topic and our data; performing said iterative process allowed us to organically develop our three main codes. The following section presents our findings based on the categories that we developed: the institutional pressure's effects on health, sense of lack of self-efficacy and the potential apprehension regarding a lack of resources to achieve the newly established goals.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such first-order categories allowed us to find information in the interviews which allowed us to support the relevance of those categories through the iterative reading of the transcripts. Like Zulfiqar and Prasad (2022), we performed an iterative process which involved studying articles related to our topic and our data; performing said iterative process allowed us to organically develop our three main codes. The following section presents our findings based on the categories that we developed: the institutional pressure's effects on health, sense of lack of self-efficacy and the potential apprehension regarding a lack of resources to achieve the newly established goals.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many practices derive from India, which are often informed by Hindu culture. For instance, Zulfiqar and Prasad (2021, 2022) observe how the hierarchies institutionalized through the caste system in modern Pakistan are a remnant of a pre‐partitioned Indian subcontinent. With these realities as the backdrop, a middle‐class consumer culture has blossomed (Ghani, 2014).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, at nearly 30% of the population in India, the Dalit (untouchable) and Adivasi (Indigenous) Peoples alone number nearly 400 million and face severe inequalities. In Pakistan, where the biraderi system is practiced, major divisions exist between the Zamindars (landowners), the high castes, and the Kammis (service providers), the low castes who are relegated to low-status and low-income jobs like cleaning (Zulfiqar & Prasad, 2022). The caste system has also been a prominent feature of everyday life in Sri Lanka, where three parallel caste systems exist, one among the Sinhalese, one among the Sri Lankan Tamils, and one among the Indian Tamils (Samarakoon, 2022).…”
Section: Importance Of Studying Castementioning
confidence: 99%