Burmese migrant domestic workers’ foodwork and biopedagogies in pandemic Singapore

IF 9.8 1区 经济学 Q1 FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Global Food Security-Agriculture Policy Economics and Environment Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.1016/j.gfs.2024.100792
Bittiandra Chand Somaiah , Immanuela Asa Rahadini , Brenda S.A. Yeoh , Theodora Lam , Kristel Anne Fernandez Acedera
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Abstract

COVID-19 not only increased food insecurity across the globe but has also given rise to pandemic-induced “biopedagogies,” a concept premised on conflating health with instructions on the “bios,” including how to live healthily, what to eat, and how much. Based on 24 qualitative interviews with low-waged migrant domestic workers (MDWs) in Singapore hailing from Myanmar, we explore how migrant women articulate and develop their own biopedagogical practices under pandemic-constrained circumstances. While live-in MDWs are invariably involved in preparing food for employers’ families as part of their care duties, and despite originating from historically food-producing regions, they are vulnerable to urban and cultural food insecurities at destination sites of migration given their diminished rights and subordinate positions in the household. Yet, these migrant women express agency in enacting counter-practices through their foodwork in at least two ways. First, MDWs cultivate self-care through cooking and consuming home foods during the pandemic and negotiating enough fortifying food for themselves while living in employers’ households. Secondly, through remittance-sending to left-behind families and children, they enact long-distance maternal carework through foodwork for health. We uncover how MDWs’ foodwork achieve a measure of food security despite language barriers, limited economic resources, lack of access to culturally appropriate foods at destination, and distance from their families. Experiencing vulnerability in terms of their occupational position, their plate, and the pandemic, this paper uncovers the stressors in achieving food security and health for themselves and families’ while working in Singapore.

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缅甸移徙家庭佣工在大流行病新加坡的饮食工作和生物疗法
COVID-19 不仅加剧了全球范围内的粮食不安全状况,还催生了由流行病引发的 "生物教学法",这一概念的前提是将健康与 "生物 "指导混为一谈,包括如何健康地生活、吃什么以及吃多少。基于对新加坡来自缅甸的低薪移民家政工人(MDWs)进行的 24 次定性访谈,我们探讨了移民妇女如何在大流行病制约的情况下阐述和发展她们自己的生物教学实践。虽然留宿的家政女工总是参与为雇主家人准备食物的工作,这也是她们照顾雇主的职责之一,尽管她们来自历史上的产粮区,但由于她们在家庭中的权利和从属地位被削弱,她们在移民目的地很容易受到城市和文化食物不安全因素的影响。然而,这些移民妇女至少以两种方式通过她们的食品工作表达了制定反惯例的能动性。首先,家政工人在疫情期间通过烹饪和食用家庭食品来培养自我保健意识,并在雇主家生活时为自己争取足够的强化食品。其次,通过向留守家庭和儿童汇款,她们通过食品保健工作实现了远距离的产妇护理工作。我们揭示了外籍家政工人如何在语言障碍、经济资源有限、在目的地无法获得文化上适宜的食物以及远离家人的情况下,通过食品工作实现一定程度的食品安全。本文揭示了在新加坡工作的家政工人在为自己和家人实现食品安全和健康的过程中所承受的压力。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
20.90
自引率
3.40%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: Global Food Security plays a vital role in addressing food security challenges from local to global levels. To secure food systems, it emphasizes multifaceted actions considering technological, biophysical, institutional, economic, social, and political factors. The goal is to foster food systems that meet nutritional needs, preserve the environment, support livelihoods, tackle climate change, and diminish inequalities. This journal serves as a platform for researchers, policymakers, and practitioners to access and engage with recent, diverse research and perspectives on achieving sustainable food security globally. It aspires to be an internationally recognized resource presenting cutting-edge insights in an accessible manner to a broad audience.
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