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Confronting Discrimination and Structural Inequalities: Professional Nigerian Womens Experiences of Negotiating the UK Labour Market

No. Panggil : eja-21-0678
Nama Orang : Ogbemudia, Joy
Penerbitan : [Place of publication not identified] : Proquest - Crime Justice and Cyber Criminology, 2021
AbstrakThe line between hypervisibility and invisibility appears to be blurred for Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) women in the workplace due to their race and gendered status (Lander and Santoro 2017). The intersection of race and gender exposes many BAME women to discrimination, structural inequalities, and the dynamics of tokenism, which can be a cause of intense job dissatisfaction (Stroshine and Brandl 2011). It is often the case that discussions on the economic integration of immigrants focus mainly on how the socio-economic dynamics of the host country can limit them to certain labour market sectors. While this is a key area that must be discussed, the interaction between the internal cultural and social differences and the wider structural and ideological processes of the country of residence must also be interrogated (Anthias 1992: viii). Such deep exploration contributes to the examination of migrant womens experiences of the intersection of gender, identity, and social mobility within the labour market and their personal lives. In this paper, based on individual accounts and drawing on intersectionality as an analytical framework (Crenshaw 1989; Bowleg 2012; Collins and Bilge 2020), I examine the multiple and complex interlocking structural inequalities suffered by immigrant women. This paper also presents how personal narratives can illuminate often hidden complexities in the workplace and labour market at large. Based on three main themes, deskilling and downward mobility, settling for BBC2 jobs, and confronting discrimination in skilled employment, I examine the different ways migrant women engage with their stories about negotiating the labour market, which lay bare some of the limits and gaps between policies and practices in the post-industrial labour market. I present how the different ways they engage with narratives of their experiences in the workplace is very telling of the far-reaching impact their experiences have on their self-identity and well-being. As a feminist researcher, and one whose life is also marked by migration experiences, I go beyond examining the process of deskilling to exploring how participants make sense of their experiences, the impact on their lives, and their present sense of identity.
Entri Tambahan Nama Orang
001 Hak Akses (open/membership)membership
Kata KunciRace, Gender, Intersectionality, Discrimination, Migration, Professional women, U.K., Migrant women, Downward mobility, Nigerian migrants, Nigerian women, U.K. migration, Black and Minority Ethnic (BAME), Native ethnography.
ISSN
Tahun Terbit2021
No. Indukeja-21-0678
Entri Sumber DataProquest - Crime Justice and Cyber Criminology
Entri Utama Nama orangOgbemudia, Joy
Volume, Nomor, Tahun dan Hlm.vol. 22, no. 4, p. 4-24
Entri Utama Nama Badan
Barcodeeja-21-0678
Subjek Topik
Judul UtamaConfronting Discrimination and Structural Inequalities: Professional Nigerian Womens Experiences of Negotiating the UK Labour Market
Kode Bahasaeng
Sumber KoleksiPerpustakaan Nasional
No. Panggil No. Barkod Ketersediaan
eja-21-0678 eja-21-0678 TERSEDIA
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