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The Impact of International Migration on sub-Saharan African Women to the Middle East

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  • Estella Achinko

    (The Women’s Welfare Foundation (WoWF), Cameroon)

Abstract

Recently, there has been a surge in female immigration from Africa to the Middle East, joining the global movement of migrants, while, constituting the dangers and feminist dilemmas posed by the rise in African women’s migration. Sub-Saharan African women face challenges as labor migrants in the process of leaving their home countries to the Middle East in search for job opportunities and to better their lives and families. At the center of these challenges have involved extreme dehumaniza-tion through slave labor, human trafficking, sexual exploitation while impacting their psychological and mental well being. This study analyzes the various factors that affect the migration and em-ployment of sub-Saharan African women domestic workers in the Middle East, based on both pull and push factors. The work further examines and shows how gender inequalities play a role in shaping women’s experiences in migration, and how States/governments in both the Middle East and Africa remain complicit in worsening women’s migratory experiences through laws that are be-ing established. This empirical based and theoretical discussion exposes the experiences of sub-Saharan African women through a transnational feminist lens and analysis. Also, it leads to a larger based discussion on transnational feminism and how we can construct a transnational platform that draws attention to the relationship between globalization and the international division of gendered labor. My overarching goal through this study is to draw attention to pursuing and expanding our discussions on feminist migration studies through diverse perspectives that are directed towards the empowerment of women in Africa in particular, and around the world in general.

Suggested Citation

  • Estella Achinko, 2021. "The Impact of International Migration on sub-Saharan African Women to the Middle East," Scientia Moralitas Conference Proceedings 01235, Research Association for Interdisciplinary Studies.
  • Handle: RePEc:smo:scmowp:01235
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Nicola Pratt, 2012. "The Gender Logics of Resistance to the ‘War on Terror’: constructing sex–gender difference through the erasure of patriarchy in the Middle East," Third World Quarterly, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 33(10), pages 1821-1836.
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      Keywords

      Domestic labor; Gender; International Migration; Middle East; sub-Saharan Africa; Women;
      All these keywords.

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