Human Relations
Volume 69, Issue 3, 2016, Pages 813-838

When the ‘unorganizable’ organize: The collective mobilization of migrant domestic workers in London (Article)

Jiang Z.* , Korczynski M.
  • a University of Roehampton, United Kingdom
  • b University of Nottingham, United Kingdom

Abstract

The collective mobilization of migrant workers is an important issue for analysis. Three key barriers to the mobilization of migrant workers have been identified – employment conditions, which tend to prevent migrant workers coming together; the framings held by migrant workers, which marginalize an understanding of their position as that of exploited workers; and the issue of the sustainability of any mobilization. The article examines migrant domestic workers as a case in which collective mobilization appears highly unlikely. The article uses the social movement approach as a meta-theoretical framing to explore the collective mobilization of migrant domestic workers in London. As such, it analyses how the ‘unorganizable’ organize. We show that mobilization changed the framing of migrant domestic workers from ‘labourers of love’ to workers with rights. It was able to do this because it addressed the three barriers to mobilization: by creating a space for the development of communities of coping among migrant workers; by using politicized learning; and by using participative democracy and collective leadership development, tied to links with formal organizations. The article argues for the importance of social scientists examining the creative processes by which migrant workers move towards collective mobilization, and for the utility of a social movement approach in this process. © 2016, The Author(s) 2016.

Author Keywords

domestic work unorganizable communities of coping collective mobilization Migrant workers social movement

Index Keywords

United Kingdom political system Learning scientist leadership organization migrant worker theoretical model mobilization human migrant human experiment worker

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84959103636&doi=10.1177%2f0018726715600229&partnerID=40&md5=39a4580169faf3c88dc3993b616bb325

DOI: 10.1177/0018726715600229
ISSN: 00187267
Cited by: 9
Original Language: English