Globalization and the health and well-being of migrant domestic workers in Malaysia

BackgroundNeoliberal globalization contributes to the out-migration of labour from sending countries in the global South. Supported by multilateral organizations including the IMF and World Bank, the migration and development nexus holds that nations and households in migrant sending countries can m...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Spitzer, Denise L., Thambiah, Shanthi, Wong, Yut Lin, Kaundan, Manimaran Krishnan
Format: Article
Published: BMC 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/38271/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Universiti Malaya
id my.um.eprints.38271
record_format eprints
spelling my.um.eprints.382712023-11-14T01:46:26Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/38271/ Globalization and the health and well-being of migrant domestic workers in Malaysia Spitzer, Denise L. Thambiah, Shanthi Wong, Yut Lin Kaundan, Manimaran Krishnan HD Industries. Land use. Labor BackgroundNeoliberal globalization contributes to the out-migration of labour from sending countries in the global South. Supported by multilateral organizations including the IMF and World Bank, the migration and development nexus holds that nations and households in migrant sending countries can migrate their way out of poverty. Two countries that embrace this paradigm, the Philippines and Indonesia, are major suppliers of migrant labour including domestic workers, and Malaysia is a primary destination country.Theory and methodsWe deployed a multi-scalar and intersectional lens to highlight the impact of global forces and policies, interacting with constructions of gender and national identity, to explore the health and wellbeing of migrant domestic workers in Malaysia. In addition to documentary analysis, we conducted face-to-face interviews with 30 Indonesian and 24 Filipino migrant domestic workers, five representatives from civil society organizations, three government representatives, and four individuals engaged in labour brokerage and the health screening of migrant workers in Kuala Lumpur.ResultsMigrant domestic workers in Malaysia work long hours in private homes and are not protected by labour laws. Workers were generally satisfied with their access to health services; however, their intersectional status, which is both an outcome of, and contextualized by, the lack of opportunities in their own country, prolonged familial separation, low wages, and lack of control in the workplace, contributed to stress and related disorders-which we regard as the embodied manifestation of their migratory experiences. Migrant domestic workers eased these ill effects through self-care, spiritual practices, and the embrace of gendered values of self-sacrifice for the family as a form of solace.ConclusionsStructural inequities and the mobilization of gendered values of self-abnegation underpin the migration of domestic workers as a development strategy. While individual self-care practices were used to cope with the hardships of their work and family separation, these efforts did not remedy the harms nor redress structural inequities wrought by neoliberal globalization. Improvements in the long-term health and wellbeing of Indonesian and Filipino migrant domestic workers in Malaysia cannot focus solely on the preparation and maintenance of healthy bodies for productive labour, but must attend to workers' attainment of adequate social determinants of health, which challenges the migration as development paradigm. Neo-liberal policy instruments such as privatization, marketisation and commercialization of migrant labour have led to both host and home countries benefitting, but at the expense of the migrant domestic workers' well-being. BMC 2023-04 Article PeerReviewed Spitzer, Denise L. and Thambiah, Shanthi and Wong, Yut Lin and Kaundan, Manimaran Krishnan (2023) Globalization and the health and well-being of migrant domestic workers in Malaysia. Globalization and Health, 19 (1). ISSN 1744-8603, DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s12992-023-00925-w <https://doi.org/10.1186/s12992-023-00925-w>. 10.1186/s12992-023-00925-w
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic HD Industries. Land use. Labor
spellingShingle HD Industries. Land use. Labor
Spitzer, Denise L.
Thambiah, Shanthi
Wong, Yut Lin
Kaundan, Manimaran Krishnan
Globalization and the health and well-being of migrant domestic workers in Malaysia
description BackgroundNeoliberal globalization contributes to the out-migration of labour from sending countries in the global South. Supported by multilateral organizations including the IMF and World Bank, the migration and development nexus holds that nations and households in migrant sending countries can migrate their way out of poverty. Two countries that embrace this paradigm, the Philippines and Indonesia, are major suppliers of migrant labour including domestic workers, and Malaysia is a primary destination country.Theory and methodsWe deployed a multi-scalar and intersectional lens to highlight the impact of global forces and policies, interacting with constructions of gender and national identity, to explore the health and wellbeing of migrant domestic workers in Malaysia. In addition to documentary analysis, we conducted face-to-face interviews with 30 Indonesian and 24 Filipino migrant domestic workers, five representatives from civil society organizations, three government representatives, and four individuals engaged in labour brokerage and the health screening of migrant workers in Kuala Lumpur.ResultsMigrant domestic workers in Malaysia work long hours in private homes and are not protected by labour laws. Workers were generally satisfied with their access to health services; however, their intersectional status, which is both an outcome of, and contextualized by, the lack of opportunities in their own country, prolonged familial separation, low wages, and lack of control in the workplace, contributed to stress and related disorders-which we regard as the embodied manifestation of their migratory experiences. Migrant domestic workers eased these ill effects through self-care, spiritual practices, and the embrace of gendered values of self-sacrifice for the family as a form of solace.ConclusionsStructural inequities and the mobilization of gendered values of self-abnegation underpin the migration of domestic workers as a development strategy. While individual self-care practices were used to cope with the hardships of their work and family separation, these efforts did not remedy the harms nor redress structural inequities wrought by neoliberal globalization. Improvements in the long-term health and wellbeing of Indonesian and Filipino migrant domestic workers in Malaysia cannot focus solely on the preparation and maintenance of healthy bodies for productive labour, but must attend to workers' attainment of adequate social determinants of health, which challenges the migration as development paradigm. Neo-liberal policy instruments such as privatization, marketisation and commercialization of migrant labour have led to both host and home countries benefitting, but at the expense of the migrant domestic workers' well-being.
format Article
author Spitzer, Denise L.
Thambiah, Shanthi
Wong, Yut Lin
Kaundan, Manimaran Krishnan
author_facet Spitzer, Denise L.
Thambiah, Shanthi
Wong, Yut Lin
Kaundan, Manimaran Krishnan
author_sort Spitzer, Denise L.
title Globalization and the health and well-being of migrant domestic workers in Malaysia
title_short Globalization and the health and well-being of migrant domestic workers in Malaysia
title_full Globalization and the health and well-being of migrant domestic workers in Malaysia
title_fullStr Globalization and the health and well-being of migrant domestic workers in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Globalization and the health and well-being of migrant domestic workers in Malaysia
title_sort globalization and the health and well-being of migrant domestic workers in malaysia
publisher BMC
publishDate 2023
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/38271/
_version_ 1783876661064761344