Divergent Development, Racialised Rights: Globalised Labour Markets and the Trade of Nurses -- The Case of the Philippines
- Fecha
2004
- Autores
Rochelle E. Ball
- Resumen
Since the 1970s, the Philippines has become a major global exporter of nurses. Nurse-exporters tend to be Third World nations that supply capital-rich nations with their best nurses: a situation that has exacerbated pre-existing imbalances in health care services. This article analyses the skilled labour migration of Filipino nurses from both the supply & demand sides of the global trade of nurses. This approach highlights the impacts of large-scale skilled migration on origin labour markets/nations & in understanding globalisation processes in creating divergent development. The article further explores the theme of divergent development by analysing the labour markets in two major nurse-importing nations: the United States and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Through these two case studies, we see differences in the dynamics of demand for nurses & how & in what ways the labour & human rights concerns of Filipino migrant nurses are differentiated by destination according to a racialised hierarchy of labour. 53 References. [Copyright 2004 Elsevier Ltd.]
- Journal title
Women's Studies International Forum
- Volumen
27
- Archivos adjuntos
- Conexiones
- Los sectores económicos
Occupations in services - Domestic work y Home child care providers
- Los grupos destinatarios
Los investigadores
- Relevancia geográfica
Estados Unidos y Arabia Saudita
- Esferas de la actividad
Estudios en Género y Sexualidad y Ciencias Políticas
- Idiomas
Inglés