Feminist Theory
Volume 20, Issue 3, 2019, Pages 247-268
Reproducing the national family: kinship claims, development discourse and migrant caregivers in Palestine/Israel (Article)
Brown R.H.*
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a
Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Washington University in St. Louis, United States
Abstract
This article probes the politics of the migrant caregiver/citizen-employer relationship in Palestine/Israel as it unfolds within the Jewish-Israeli home. Based on interviews with migrants from the Philippines, Nepal, India and Sri Lanka and their Jewish-Israeli employers, I examine how Israel’s ethno-racially hierarchical citizenship regime and the transnational gendering and racialisation of carework manifest in this relationship. I begin by situating migrant women working as caregivers within the legal and political context of Palestine/Israel, delineating how gendered constructions of the Jewish-Israeli woman uphold the borders of the nation and paint non-Jewish migrant women as reproductively threatening. I then analyse two common tropes among citizen-employers in describing migrant caregivers. The first, what I term the ‘kinship trope’, characterizes them as ‘one of the family’, obscuring the ethno-racial basis of the state. I show how this trope contrasts sharply with Zionist settler colonial rhetoric portraying Jewish-Israelis as ‘one big family’. The second trope represents migrant women as individual agents of economic development and Israel as a market-driven, neoliberal society that is equally a state for all its citizens. By depicting Israel as a ‘modern’, ‘progressive’ state that is an exemplar of gender equality, this trope again masks the ethno-racial basis of citizenship, as well as gender disparities. Finally, I argue for a feminist approach to migrant carework that accounts for the ways neoliberal labour formations are mediated by gendered racisms specific to a particular state’s racial nation-building project. © The Author(s) 2019.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85063042065&doi=10.1177%2f1464700119833039&partnerID=40&md5=dfc6615fcfdc8e9af87dbfa9356b9aeb
DOI: 10.1177/1464700119833039
ISSN: 14647001
Original Language: English