As one of the primary countries of destination for migrant domestic workers in Asia, Singapore is a developed country with one of the highest standards of living in the region. Yet, the city-state has been on the receiving end of extensive criticism concerning the rights and protections of migrant domestic workers. Civil society organizations have been one of the loudest critics, and in recent public demands for change, two organizations have put forward new and controversial claims. This study centers on the two reports produced by HOME & Liberty Shared and RAB, which frame migrant domestic workers as victims of forced labor. The objectives of this study are to assess these claims by identifying and critically discussing the general proble...
This paper seeks to understand the everyday social experiences of Indian migrant construction worker...
This article examines the link between the mandatory live-in policy and the unsafe working and livin...
How does precarious work entail social vulnerabilities and moral complicities? Theorists of precarit...
Some Asian countries such as Malaysia and Singapore have been experiencing economic growth which, in...
In Hong Kong there are currently about 380 thousand migrant domestic workers (Hong Kong Special Admi...
Since 2005, NGO activism, calling for greater legal protection for contract migrant workers has been...
Scholarship on civil society in Singapore has tended to emphasize the structural and institutional c...
This thesis examines the complex power structures that underscore the migration and employment of In...
In the last five years, interest among civil society actors in the issues migrant domestic workers f...
As globalisation becomes more and more familiar in our everyday lives, one readily visible phenomeno...
By severely constraining the political personhood of temporary migrant workers, states’ use of depor...
This paper seeks to understand the forms everyday negotiations of diversity take in the ‘heartland’n...
This research analyzes Singapore’s one-party system, its controls of civil society, and the inabilit...
© 2018 Kai ChooThere has been growing concerns around the vulnerability of migrant domestic workers ...
It is widely acknowledged that Singapore’s labour-migration regime is unequal and bifurcated, with m...
This paper seeks to understand the everyday social experiences of Indian migrant construction worker...
This article examines the link between the mandatory live-in policy and the unsafe working and livin...
How does precarious work entail social vulnerabilities and moral complicities? Theorists of precarit...
Some Asian countries such as Malaysia and Singapore have been experiencing economic growth which, in...
In Hong Kong there are currently about 380 thousand migrant domestic workers (Hong Kong Special Admi...
Since 2005, NGO activism, calling for greater legal protection for contract migrant workers has been...
Scholarship on civil society in Singapore has tended to emphasize the structural and institutional c...
This thesis examines the complex power structures that underscore the migration and employment of In...
In the last five years, interest among civil society actors in the issues migrant domestic workers f...
As globalisation becomes more and more familiar in our everyday lives, one readily visible phenomeno...
By severely constraining the political personhood of temporary migrant workers, states’ use of depor...
This paper seeks to understand the forms everyday negotiations of diversity take in the ‘heartland’n...
This research analyzes Singapore’s one-party system, its controls of civil society, and the inabilit...
© 2018 Kai ChooThere has been growing concerns around the vulnerability of migrant domestic workers ...
It is widely acknowledged that Singapore’s labour-migration regime is unequal and bifurcated, with m...
This paper seeks to understand the everyday social experiences of Indian migrant construction worker...
This article examines the link between the mandatory live-in policy and the unsafe working and livin...
How does precarious work entail social vulnerabilities and moral complicities? Theorists of precarit...