Description

Book Synopsis

Domestic service has long been one of the largest forms of urban employment across southern Africa. Home economics provides the first comprehensive history of this essential sector in the decades following independence and the end of apartheid. Focusing on Lusaka and drawing wider comparisons, the book traces how Black workers and employers adapted existing models of domestic service as part of broader responses to changing gendered employment patterns, economic decline, and endemic poverty. It reveals how kin-based domestic service gradually displaced wage labour and how women and girl workers came to dominate kin-based and waged domestic service, with profound consequences for labour regulation and worker organising. Theoretically innovative and empirically rich, the book provides essential insights into debates about gender, work, and urban economies that are critical to understanding southern Africa’s post-colonial and post-apartheid history.
This book is relevant to United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 8, Decent work and economic growth



Table of Contents

Introduction
1 Feminising domestic service
2 Working women and childcare challenges
3 Girl domestic workers’ aspirations and frustrations
4 Regulation, protection, and exclusion
5 Collective organising and the limits of unionisation
Conclusion

Bibliography
Index

Home Economics: Domestic Service and Gender in

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    A Hardback by Sacha Hepburn

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      View other formats and editions of Home Economics: Domestic Service and Gender in by Sacha Hepburn

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 16/08/2022
      ISBN13: 9781526162021, 978-1526162021
      ISBN10: 1526162024

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Domestic service has long been one of the largest forms of urban employment across southern Africa. Home economics provides the first comprehensive history of this essential sector in the decades following independence and the end of apartheid. Focusing on Lusaka and drawing wider comparisons, the book traces how Black workers and employers adapted existing models of domestic service as part of broader responses to changing gendered employment patterns, economic decline, and endemic poverty. It reveals how kin-based domestic service gradually displaced wage labour and how women and girl workers came to dominate kin-based and waged domestic service, with profound consequences for labour regulation and worker organising. Theoretically innovative and empirically rich, the book provides essential insights into debates about gender, work, and urban economies that are critical to understanding southern Africa’s post-colonial and post-apartheid history.
      This book is relevant to United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 8, Decent work and economic growth



      Table of Contents

      Introduction
      1 Feminising domestic service
      2 Working women and childcare challenges
      3 Girl domestic workers’ aspirations and frustrations
      4 Regulation, protection, and exclusion
      5 Collective organising and the limits of unionisation
      Conclusion

      Bibliography
      Index

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