Published In

Caring for Old Age: Perspectives from South Asia

Document Type

Book Chapter

Publication Date

4-2020

Subjects

Sri Lanka -- Emigration and immigration, Migrant workers -- Sri Lanka -- Social conditions, Women household employees -- South Asia

Abstract

Discriminatory assumptions about family structure and care work underlie a 2013 Sri Lankan state regulation, referred to as the “Family Background Report” (FBR), which restricts the transnational labor migration of women with children under the age of five. Since the early 1980s, women from Sri Lanka have worked as domestic servants in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates. A culture of migration has developed, and labourers’ remittances sustain family financial strategies. The FBR regulations narrow people’s employment options and destabilize long-standing practices of intergenerational reciprocity. Using ethnographic data gathered in 2015, the chapter considers the potential and actual consequences of these rules for migrants and care-giving grandmothers.

The focus on women’s “emplacement” provides a crucial counterpoint to current theoretical discussion in the migration literature on issues of “deportability.” Scholars have convincingly argued that uncertainty around a migrant labourer’s right to stay in the host country constitutes a form of structural violence and creates a docile, productive workforce. Compared to the adverse effects migrants experience under threat of deportation (inability to stay in the host country), FBR restrictions (inability to leave the country of origin) creates converse but equally oppressive situations of social suffering and precarity for migrants and their families. The research contributes to discussions in political anthropology about interactions between the family and the state.

Rights

Creative Commons License
This book chapter is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Published by Heidelberg University Publishing (heiUP) Heidelberg 2020.

DOI

10.17885/heiup.597

Persistent Identifier

https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/32615

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