In Indonesia, the plight of TKW (Tenaga Kerja Wanita - the common term for women migrant workers) has been a subject of public controversy for decades. Academic accounts of the conditions of Indonesian migrant domestic workers tend to resonate with local public perceptions. Authors such as Bethan (1993) and Robinson (2000a, 2000b) and Krisnawaty (1997) focus predominantly on the threats and privations facing women working abroad as domestic help - in Saudi Arabia in particular - and the shortcomings of official labour migration agencies. Yet, while conditions in receiving countries and the experiences of women in the barracks of registered labour export companies in Jakarta are the subject of many books and articles, the conditions experien...
The increasing number of Indonesian women migrant workers (IWMWs) started since 1997, and remain hig...
markdownabstractIntroduction For the last two decades, the rights of domestic workers have drawn ...
Each year, around half a million Indonesians travel abroad to work, half of those to the Middle East...
This paper describes how the Indonesian women, despite the fact that some migrant workers are econom...
There are many Indonesian women who try their luck by working overseas. The common reason is becaus...
In the largely traditional Indonesian community, especially in the rural areas, the labor division b...
This paper aims to describe the habitat and agency of Indonesian Labor Women (TKW). The method used ...
"More than 10,5 million Indonesians are seeking work. Neither under-qualification for labour nor dis...
There are evidence of growing Indonesian labour migration flows overseas. This involves at least two...
Dependency on migrant workers is a growing situation in Malaysia particularly the ones from Indonesi...
<div class="WordSection1"><p><em>This research is motivated by the widespread of village women who w...
This study investigates and analyzes various phenomena related to transnational trafficking of women...
The feminisation of factory work and increases in female labour migration are two widely noted effec...
International migration occurs because population growth does not match the job opportunities and av...
Recruitment of foreign workers by Malaysian employers is subject to the requirements set by the Mala...
The increasing number of Indonesian women migrant workers (IWMWs) started since 1997, and remain hig...
markdownabstractIntroduction For the last two decades, the rights of domestic workers have drawn ...
Each year, around half a million Indonesians travel abroad to work, half of those to the Middle East...
This paper describes how the Indonesian women, despite the fact that some migrant workers are econom...
There are many Indonesian women who try their luck by working overseas. The common reason is becaus...
In the largely traditional Indonesian community, especially in the rural areas, the labor division b...
This paper aims to describe the habitat and agency of Indonesian Labor Women (TKW). The method used ...
"More than 10,5 million Indonesians are seeking work. Neither under-qualification for labour nor dis...
There are evidence of growing Indonesian labour migration flows overseas. This involves at least two...
Dependency on migrant workers is a growing situation in Malaysia particularly the ones from Indonesi...
<div class="WordSection1"><p><em>This research is motivated by the widespread of village women who w...
This study investigates and analyzes various phenomena related to transnational trafficking of women...
The feminisation of factory work and increases in female labour migration are two widely noted effec...
International migration occurs because population growth does not match the job opportunities and av...
Recruitment of foreign workers by Malaysian employers is subject to the requirements set by the Mala...
The increasing number of Indonesian women migrant workers (IWMWs) started since 1997, and remain hig...
markdownabstractIntroduction For the last two decades, the rights of domestic workers have drawn ...
Each year, around half a million Indonesians travel abroad to work, half of those to the Middle East...