Litcius/Paper detail

The gendered geographies of dispossession and social reproduction: Homeworkers in the Global South during the COVID-19 pandemic

Ghazal Zulfiqar

2022Organization17 citationsDOI

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic exposed global capitalism’s fault lines and the deep vulnerabilities built into its functionings. This article investigates how Pakistan’s informally employed women homeworkers, who labor at the bottom of global production networks (GPNs), fared during the first year of the pandemic. It empirically demonstrates how the GPN’s disruption wiped out the limited livelihoods of women homeworkers, which significantly jeopardized the social reproduction of their households, devastating entire communities. Through all of this, women homeworkers’ agency was evident in the everyday practices of social reproduction. The pandemic also revealed a collective solidarity that had community and extended family dimensions. The struggles and solidarities should be viewed as agentic acts of survival, against the economic and socio-political conditions of dispossession that come out of laboring in the Global South, as informal workers.

Topics & Concepts

ReproductionLivelihoodSolidaritySociologyCapitalismSocial reproductionAgency (philosophy)PandemicGender studiesPrecarityNeoliberalism (international relations)Economic growthPoliticsPolitical scienceCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Political economyGeographySocial scienceEconomicsSocial capitalBiologyArchaeologyLawInfectious disease (medical specialty)AgricultureDiseasePathologyEcologyMedicineEmployment and Welfare StudiesCOVID-19 Pandemic ImpactsGlobal trade, sustainability, and social impact