Abstract
Domestic work, as one of the most feminised occupations in existence, is also one of those least likely to offer a prospect of equal treatment with workers in other sectors. Notably, live-in domestic workers are regularly excluded from even the most fundamental entitlements such as that to an hourly minimum wage. The rise of an international industry organising live-in care work for the frail and disabled brings the questions of how to regulate this sector back to the table also and especially in the most affluent countries. Departing from a prominent recent court decision in Germany, the contribution explores how jurisdictions around the globe approach the key legal questions determining the labour rights of live-ins. On this basis, it offers a discussion of the way forward in a policy area which urgently requires an honest discussion of how to balance conflicting vital interest of different disadvantaged groups in a fair and realistic way.
Reference59 articles.
1. Appelbaum, Lauren D. (2022, August 04). Why a Domestic Workers Bill of Rights?. Available online: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2kc9b94m.
2. Technology and Dementia: The Future is Now;Astell;Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders,2019
3. Ayalon, Liat, and Rapolien, Gražina (2021). The disruption of the care chain: Why do Lithuanian migrant home care workers return to their home country?. Ageing & Society, 1–17.
4. One’s Workplace, Other’s Home? Work and Health of Domestic Workers in Argentina;Bauleo;Annals of Global Health,2018
5. Paid domestic work and the struggles of care workers in Latin America;Blofield;Current Sociology Monograph,2018