Litcius/Paper detail

How COVID-19 may alleviate the multiple marginalization of racialized migrant workers

Maike Isaac, Jennifer Elrick

2020Ethnic and Racial Studies25 citationsDOI

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has heightened the visibility of "low skilled" migrant workers in the agricultural and care work sectors, who have been rebranded as "essential" by receiving states in the Global North. Many such workers are from the Global South and experience marginalization due to their overlapping social positions: race, gender, ascribed skill level, and legal status. We assess how COVID-19 can prompt a revaluation of the legal statuses of "essential" migrant workers in countries of the Global North and thereby alleviate their marginalization to a small extent. We present two frames of deservingness – based on work and based on sacrifice – as having the potential to facilitate claims for improved legal status. We argue that deservingness claims stemming from migrants' willingness to sacrifice their health and lives have the greatest potential for success.

Topics & Concepts

SacrificeCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Race (biology)Work (physics)Legal statusMigrant workersDemographic economicsPandemicPolitical science2019-20 coronavirus outbreakSocial distanceSociologyEconomic growthDevelopment economicsGender studiesEconomicsGeographyLawMedicineDiseaseMechanical engineeringArchaeologyPathologyVirologyOutbreakInfectious disease (medical specialty)EngineeringEmployment and Welfare StudiesMigration and Labor DynamicsMigration, Refugees, and Integration