DEADLINE EXTENDED! September 30, 2009 (by 12noon, CST).
Low-wage Work, Migration and Gender
In recent years, as the number of women, particularly immigrant women who enter the U.S. labor market increases, the situation and working conditions of low wage workers, especially for women working at the low
end of the labor market, has become more challenging. In order to improve the employment conditions, job quality and the economic prospects of low wage women there is a need to understand the evolution of low wage labor markets, the changing dynamics of low wage work, the conditions in the jobs that low wage women tend to occupy, and the strategies that have been developed to improve their working conditions.
A significant portion of research on the interaction between gender, low wage work, and migration focuses on the particular location of women in the formal occupational/industrial structure. New scholarship has added and gone beyond this work by establishing the critical role of low income immigrant women workers in sustaining economic activity and has shown how they navigate through political and economic uncertainties by developing alternative forms of human capital development. These include supporting labor organizing strategies, taking the leadership in campaigns that support workers in low wage sectors, and engaging in economic development activities that support themselves, their households, and their communities while seeking to improve the quantity and quality of jobs. A focus on low wage and immigrant women is particularly important at this time as the country faces a deepening labor market and employment crisis, tougher immigration policies, and ongoing local and global economicrestructuring processes that present serious challenges to the ability of women and families to improve their livelihoods.
In this call for papers, we seek to compile essays from academics, practitioners, and others interested in understanding the conditions of low wage and immigrant women. We seek papers that describe and analyze the particular condition of women in the low wage labor market, the characteristics and processes related to employment in particular jobs, and strategies to improve the human capital and the working conditions of
women who work in the low wage labor market. Selected papers will be published in an edited volume.
We are also going to be holding a conference on low-wage work, migration and gender at the University of Illinois at Chicago in the Spring of 2009 where participants will present their papers and have an opportunity to discuss their work.
Key themes of the conference include:
(1) How do recent political and economic transformations impact the labor force participation and the labor market opportunities for low income and immigrant women?
(2) What alternative mechanisms of human capital development do immigrant and low income women develop in order to deal with labor market and economic challenges?
(3) What is the role of community based organizations and NGOs in supporting low wage and immigrant women?
(4) What are some of the recent strategies and campaigns that have been successful in organizing low wage and immigrant women?
We welcome submissions on these and related topics from a variety of perspectives and academic disciplines. We also seek to invite submissions and participation from practitioners or teams that include academics and
practitioners.
Funding:
Modest funds are available to support projects. Airfare and lodging will be provided to participants whose papers are selected for the conference. Honoraria will be provided to the participants whose papers will be
selected for the edited volume.
Submission instructions:
Please send an abstract no longer than 200 words by September 30, 12 noon to: lmg2009@gmail.
For more information, please contact:
Anna Guevarra guevarra@uic.
This Project is supported by a Grant from the Ford Foundation.