It is widely acknowledged that foreign domestic workers play an increasingly significant role in plugging social reproductive gaps in the areas of housework, childcare, and eldercare amongst many industrialised economies in East and Southeast Asia. This dependency is particularly acute in Singapore where one in five households employs a live-in domestic worker. Despite this growing trend, the industry remains largely unregulated where domestic work is still perceived as informal work within the private sphere of the household, and hence excluded from key labour rights and protections. This briefing presents main findings from a research study that examines the costs and benefits of ...
This research analyzes Singapore’s one-party system, its controls of civil society, and the inabilit...
This thesis examines the complex power structures that underscore the migration and employment of In...
Some Asian countries such as Malaysia and Singapore have been experiencing economic growth which, in...
Domestic work remains one of the key occupations for many female migrants in Southeast Asia. As a lo...
Employment agents who match migrant domestic workers to Singaporean employers play a critical role i...
In 1978, Singapore was the first country to introduce legislation allowing foreign domestic workers ...
Introduction For the last two decades, the rights of domestic workers have drawn attention from ...
To many Foreign Domestic Workers (FDWs), Singapore is a land of opportunities. Domestic work becomes...
Singapore has one of the most open economies in Asia in terms of trade, foreign direct investment in...
This study aims to understand the true nature of employer and domestic worker relationship in Singap...
There are currently over 320,000 full-time, live-in migrant domestic workers (MDWs) in Hong Kong, th...
The article considers how the employment of domestic workers by middle class Malaysian households ha...
In Hong Kong there are currently about 380 thousand migrant domestic workers (Hong Kong Special Admi...
This article examines the link between the mandatory live-in policy and the unsafe working and livin...
The International Labour Organization's Domestic Worker Convention, resolved in June 2011 and soon t...
This research analyzes Singapore’s one-party system, its controls of civil society, and the inabilit...
This thesis examines the complex power structures that underscore the migration and employment of In...
Some Asian countries such as Malaysia and Singapore have been experiencing economic growth which, in...
Domestic work remains one of the key occupations for many female migrants in Southeast Asia. As a lo...
Employment agents who match migrant domestic workers to Singaporean employers play a critical role i...
In 1978, Singapore was the first country to introduce legislation allowing foreign domestic workers ...
Introduction For the last two decades, the rights of domestic workers have drawn attention from ...
To many Foreign Domestic Workers (FDWs), Singapore is a land of opportunities. Domestic work becomes...
Singapore has one of the most open economies in Asia in terms of trade, foreign direct investment in...
This study aims to understand the true nature of employer and domestic worker relationship in Singap...
There are currently over 320,000 full-time, live-in migrant domestic workers (MDWs) in Hong Kong, th...
The article considers how the employment of domestic workers by middle class Malaysian households ha...
In Hong Kong there are currently about 380 thousand migrant domestic workers (Hong Kong Special Admi...
This article examines the link between the mandatory live-in policy and the unsafe working and livin...
The International Labour Organization's Domestic Worker Convention, resolved in June 2011 and soon t...
This research analyzes Singapore’s one-party system, its controls of civil society, and the inabilit...
This thesis examines the complex power structures that underscore the migration and employment of In...
Some Asian countries such as Malaysia and Singapore have been experiencing economic growth which, in...