Who goes ? Failures of marital provisioning and women’s agency among less skilled emigrant women workers from Kerala
Abstract
Unlike Sri Lanka, the Philippines or Indonesia, the major structuring contexts of international migration from Kerala / India do not enable the mobility of less skilled women workers, yet it has been observed that they are a prominent presence in some Middle Eastern destinations. Legal provisions designed by the Indian state apparently to protect less skilled women raise the barriers to their movement. There are also cultural restrictions as overseas mobility removes women workers from the everyday regulatory scope of local / family patriarchy. Autonomous migration by less skilled women defies the gender norm in Kerala which mandates marital control over women’s sexuality. These factors render the agency of emigrant women workers oppositional, at once defiant and compromised. Recent work suggests that women migrate as domestic workers when there is a compelling need by flouting state regulation through easily accessible parallel channels.