The Experiences of Ghanaian Live-in Caregivers in the United States

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science, Cultural Studies, Emigration & Immigration, Political Science, International, Gender Studies
Cover of the book The Experiences of Ghanaian Live-in Caregivers in the United States by Martha Donkor, Lexington Books
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Martha Donkor ISBN: 9781498564465
Publisher: Lexington Books Publication: November 15, 2017
Imprint: Lexington Books Language: English
Author: Martha Donkor
ISBN: 9781498564465
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication: November 15, 2017
Imprint: Lexington Books
Language: English

Using the convergence of the impact of globalization and political turmoil in Ghana on Ghanaian women as a backdrop, this book examines the migration of the women to the US and their decisions to care for upper middle class white seniors who elected to stay in their homes to be cared for by private caregivers. The book explores the attraction of domestic care work, the women’s perceptions of their job, their relationships with their clients, and the dynamics of their relationships with their immediate families and families left behind in Ghana. It also analyzes the women’s interactions with the immigrant community from their remote work sites. The book examines widely-held beliefs about domestic work as undervalued, under-remunerated, and relegated to marginalized immigrant women of color. While admitting that these problems exist, the women whose stories are told in the book did not believe that their brand of care work, which they called private practice, was undervalued or underpaid. They also did not think that racism played a role in the concentration of immigrant women of color in domestic care work as widely believed, although, again, the women admitted that there was racism in American society. By doing so, the women symbolically placed themselves beyond the institutional barriers that constrain the lives of women of color in American society. And while it addresses common themes like exploitation, abuse, restriction of movement, etc. that other studies of immigrant live-in caregiving address, this book stands out in two major ways. First is its truly transnational character. It links the women’s background in Ghana to their immigration history and how these two influenced their choice as well as perceptions of care work and then loops their experience of care work back to expectations in Ghana. Second, the book validates the women’s voices as a product of their cultural background, thus making the case that the women’s choices and experiences were informed by conditions in the US and the cultural baggage the women brought with them. The book argues that private care work satisfied women’s financial expectations, and with that, leverage in their families.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Using the convergence of the impact of globalization and political turmoil in Ghana on Ghanaian women as a backdrop, this book examines the migration of the women to the US and their decisions to care for upper middle class white seniors who elected to stay in their homes to be cared for by private caregivers. The book explores the attraction of domestic care work, the women’s perceptions of their job, their relationships with their clients, and the dynamics of their relationships with their immediate families and families left behind in Ghana. It also analyzes the women’s interactions with the immigrant community from their remote work sites. The book examines widely-held beliefs about domestic work as undervalued, under-remunerated, and relegated to marginalized immigrant women of color. While admitting that these problems exist, the women whose stories are told in the book did not believe that their brand of care work, which they called private practice, was undervalued or underpaid. They also did not think that racism played a role in the concentration of immigrant women of color in domestic care work as widely believed, although, again, the women admitted that there was racism in American society. By doing so, the women symbolically placed themselves beyond the institutional barriers that constrain the lives of women of color in American society. And while it addresses common themes like exploitation, abuse, restriction of movement, etc. that other studies of immigrant live-in caregiving address, this book stands out in two major ways. First is its truly transnational character. It links the women’s background in Ghana to their immigration history and how these two influenced their choice as well as perceptions of care work and then loops their experience of care work back to expectations in Ghana. Second, the book validates the women’s voices as a product of their cultural background, thus making the case that the women’s choices and experiences were informed by conditions in the US and the cultural baggage the women brought with them. The book argues that private care work satisfied women’s financial expectations, and with that, leverage in their families.

More books from Lexington Books

Cover of the book Toward More Family-Centered Family Sciences by Martha Donkor
Cover of the book Essays on Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead by Martha Donkor
Cover of the book Perspectives on Flourishing in Schools by Martha Donkor
Cover of the book The Contested Floodplain by Martha Donkor
Cover of the book Technological Forms and Ecological Communication by Martha Donkor
Cover of the book Undeserving by Martha Donkor
Cover of the book Racial Cleansing in Arkansas, 1883–1924 by Martha Donkor
Cover of the book Secularism and the Crisis of Minority Identity in Postcolonial Literature by Martha Donkor
Cover of the book The Marx Machine by Martha Donkor
Cover of the book Enhancing Quality in Transnational Higher Education by Martha Donkor
Cover of the book Whiteness at the Table by Martha Donkor
Cover of the book The Fantasy of Globalism by Martha Donkor
Cover of the book The Challenge of the American Presidency by Martha Donkor
Cover of the book Many Heavens, One Earth by Martha Donkor
Cover of the book The Political Economy of the Interior Gold Coast by Martha Donkor
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy