Season 1: Migrants’ Rights and Realities in the Time of a Global Pandemic
Episode Description
Ahead of #InternationalMigrantsDay, listen to experts on labour migration talk about experiences of South Asian women during the onslaught of COVID-19. How did conditions of stigmatization, discrimination, and social exclusion affect women migrant workers in the countries of origin and destination? What role did they play in the macro and micro economy before and during the crisis? Did they have access to services, social protection, and welfare that recognized and met their needs as workers?
Season 1: Structurally unequal: When migrant workers contribute but have little or no benefit from social security schemes | Igor Bosc
Episode Description
If migrants supply substantial labour for countries of destination, why don’t they have access to the same social welfare benefits as local workers? And if they yield income for their countries of origin, why don’t their governments arrange social security schemes that would meet their needs whenever and however they want it? Where are the women’s voices in leveraging migrant workers’ access to social security funds?
Season 1: When Sri Lankan women migrant workers face social welfare deficits at home and abroad | Bilesha Weeraratne
Episode Description
For many years now, civil society has been calling for a better understanding of the gendered nature of labour migration. In Sri Lanka, data on the remittances sent by migrant workers remain aggregated. This reveals the government’s lack of information and recognition of women’s contribution to the macroeconomy. This has affected its investment in women workers' welfare. But this lack of recognition and social safety net does not only happen in Sri Lanka. It happens even in the countries of destination which substantially benefit from migrant workers’ labour.
Season 1: The "earning less but contributing more" trap experienced by women migrants from Bangladesh | Shakirul Islam
Episode Description
When Bangladeshi women migrate for labour, they are helping their households' income and their country's economic development. But what do they get in return? Do they have a voice in financial decisions in their households? How is the Bangladeshi government using their remittances for their health benefits and social welfare?
Season 1: Is "inclusive" just another buzzword? | Igor Bosc
Episode Description
When political processes maintain the status quo-- especially the exclusions and expulsions in society-- what kind of social change comes with adding "inclusion" in the policy objectives? How can laws be "inclusive" if they are oblivious of the structural inequalities produced and reproduced by economic growth?
Season 1: A journey full of "no's": Migration of Nepali women workers | Shristi Kolakshyapati
Episode Description
The labour migration of women is replete with negatives. They have no decent work opportunities at home and yet they are banned from working abroad. As Nepali women provide migrant labour in the global care economy, what kinds of intervention will guarantee them their human rights as workers? How would policy actions based on the fundamental recognition of women's paid and unpaid work look like?
To learn more about the WOREC and GAATW study Socio-Economic Impact of COVID-19 on Returnee Migrant Women Workers, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mHaO9tbQAUY
Season 1: The public and private power of women migrants from India | Praveena Kodoth
Episode Description
What are the gains of having state policies that promote women's market participation in labour migration? What do women migrant workers lose when they rely on their social networks and do not organize as workers?
Season 1: Indian women’s migration: Journeys of social stigma and discrimination | Praveena Kodoth
Episode Description
Women who work abroad face multiple forms of exclusion from their families, communities, and the governments of their countries of origin and destination. Whether they migrate out of compulsion or out of their own personal aspiration, they will most likely be unable to meet the “good woman” standards imposed by society.