Social reproduction and migration

Period of duration of course
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Course info
Number of course hours
20
Number of hours of lecturers of reference
20
CFU 3
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Modalità esame

Essay and oral presentations

Programma

This course aims to provide an overview of the theoretical and empirical foundations of gender, labour, and social reproduction through a migration lens. Drawing on empirical studies from both the Global North and the Global South, it examines how the intersection of social factors such as gender, race/ethnicity, age, and class shapes working life and economic structures, as well as the relationship between the spheres of production and social reproduction.

The course is divided into seven sessions. Following an introductory lecture on theories of social reproduction and the connections between social reproduction, care crises, and migration, the course focuses on how structural changes in both sending and receiving societies generate transnational care chains linking the Global North and the Global South. Attention is also paid to spaces of work and social reproduction, including dormitories, live-in domestic work, and everyday practices of survival.

Processes of digitalisation are also central to this debate, as they function as infrastructures of social reproduction and may contribute to further forms of racialisation in the domestic work sector. In addition, digitalisation will be examined in relation to the social reproduction practices of transnational workers. Contentious labour organising is another topic addressed in the course, with particular attention to domestic workers’ strikes as a form of political action.

Finally, the course advances debates on racialised and stratified social reproduction through the study of unaccompanied migrant children's trajectories, highlighting how children themselves can become part of family survival strategies.

Obiettivi formativi

This interdisciplinary course provides students with theoretical and empirical insights that enable them to understand the complex relationship between migration, labour, and social reproduction in the context of contemporary global crises. The course offers a deeper understanding of the connections between gender and work, the changing nature of labour, and transformations in working conditions. It also critically examines contemporary inequalities in the workplace and society, as well as the historical and structural processes through which these inequalities have developed.

Riferimenti bibliografici

Alberti, G., & Sacchetto, D. (2024). The politics of migrant labour: exit, voice, and social reproduction. Policy Press.

Alberti, G., Riedner, L., & Lonergan, G. (2025). Migration and Social Reproduction: Critical Junctions between Labour, Border and Reproductive Struggles.

Farris, S. R. (2015). Migrants' regular army of labour: gender dimensions of the impact of the global economic crisis on migrant labor in Western Europe. The Sociological Review, 63(1), 121-143.

Kofman, E. (2012). Rethinking care through social reproduction: Articulating circuits of migration. Social politics, 19(1), 142-162.

Lutz, H. (2011). The new maids: Transnational women and the care economy. Bloomsbury Publishing.

Marchetti, S. (2022). Migration and domestic work. Springer.

Ruhs, M., & Anderson, B. (Eds.). (2012). Who needs migrant workers?: labour shortages, immigration, and public policy. Oxford University Press