ABSTRACT

With specific attention to irregular migrant workers - that is to say, those without legal permits to stay in the countries in which they work - this volume focuses on domestic work, presenting studies from ten European countries, including Belgium, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, and Spain. Offering a comparative analysis of irregular migrants engaged in all kinds of domestic work, the authors explore questions relating to employment conditions, health issues and the family lives of migrants. The book examines the living and working conditions of irregular migrant domestic workers, their relations with employers, their access to basic rights such as sick leave, sick pay, and holiday pay, as well as access to health services. Close consideration is also given to the challenges for family life presented by workers' status as irregular migrants, with regard to their lives both in their countries of origin and with their employers. Through analyses of the often blurred distinction between legality and illegality, the notion of a ’career’ in domestic work and the policy responses of European nations to the growth of irregular migrant domestic work, this volume offers various conceptual developments in the study of migration and domestic work. As such, it will appeal to sociologists, political scientists, geographers and anthropologists with interests in migration, gender, the family and domestic work.

chapter |26 pages

Domestic Work in Belgium

Crossing Boundaries between Informality and Formality

chapter |24 pages

Three Different Things

Having, Knowing, and Claiming Rights: Undocumented Immigrant Domestic Workers in Germany

chapter |20 pages

‘With All the Cares in the World'

Irregular Migrant Domestic Workers in Greece

chapter |26 pages

Undocumented Domestic Workers in Italy

Surviving and Regularizing Strategies

chapter |26 pages

Regulating Migrant Domestic Work in the Netherlands

Opportunities and Pitfalls

chapter |22 pages

Globally Interdependent Households

Irregular Migrants Employed in Domestic and Care Work in Spain