Applied Behavioral Science Review
Volume 2, Issue 2, 1994, Pages 187-211

Work and its place in the lives of immigrant women: Garment workers in New York City's Chinatown (Article)

Zhou M.* , Nordquist R.
  • a Louisiana State University, United States
  • b New York University, United States

Abstract

Working wives and mothers are traditionally considered secondary wage earners, and employment is not automatically accompanied by occupational attainment of individual workers. For immigrant women, the double burden is compounded by lack of English, transferable education and skills, and knowledge of the larger economy. In this article, we have illustrated the special meanings of immigrant women's work in the context of ethnic enclave employment and family responsibility. Based on census data and fieldwork in the garment industry in New York's Chinatown, we have found that the particularly high rate of immigrant Chinese women's labor market participation is largely accounted for by the availability of jobs provided by the ethnic enclave economy, that those women are overrepresented in low-wage menial jobs, and that they tend to perceive their work as meaningful, despite of low wages, long working hours and poor working conditions. These findings suggest that survival is more important for immigrant Chinese women than their own rights in the workplace, at least in the earlier stages of immigrant adaptation, and that their wage labor is an indispensable part of the collective family effort for social mobility. The results imply that, for socioeconomically disadvantaged groups, it is difficult to achieve long-term social mobility merely through individual efforts. Therefore, policies dealing with those groups mired in poverty and confined to survival at the margins of society should put more emphasis on community development in connection to the promotion of individual education and job training. © 1994.

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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-32144455012&doi=10.1016%2f1068-8595%2894%2990013-2&partnerID=40&md5=171f832fb244642742748404ce67f231

DOI: 10.1016/1068-8595(94)90013-2
ISSN: 10688595
Cited by: 15
Original Language: English