Weeding Out the Weak: Labor, Gender, and Disability in a U.S. Fossil Fuel Boomtown

Author:

Labuski Christine M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA, USA

Abstract

COVID-19 has radically reshaped the labor dreams of many U.S. workers. This essay uses pre-pandemic fieldwork in an oil and gas “boomtown” to consider post-work imaginaries in the wake and midst of COVID-19. I use feminist and disability studies perspectives to argue that economic analyses must not only move beyond the discourse of “jobs” but must also attend to gender-based and ableist modes of discrimination that persist even in so-called booming economies. I posit the figure of the economically productive worker, asking how routine practices of identity-shaped discrimination undermine the capacities of some to embody this figure. My interview-derived and ethnographic data suggest that economic self-sufficiency is a woefully inadequate model for meeting the material needs of people, and that labor innovations such as a universal basic income are necessary to achieve the kinds of flourishing sought by those participating in the “great resignation.”

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Urban Studies,Sociology and Political Science,Anthropology,Language and Linguistics

Reference60 articles.

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2. Belsie Laura. 2022. “Amazon, Starbucks, and Beyond? Young Workers Fuel Union Drives.” The Christian Science Monitor, May 18, 2022. Accessed August 8, 2022, from https://www.csmonitor.com/Business/2022/0518/Amazon-Starbucks-and-beyond-Young-workers-fuel-union-drives

3. Toward feminist energy systems: Why adding women and solar panels is not enough✰

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