‘Ways of Seeing’—Policy paradigms and unfree labour in India

Authors

  • Lorena Arocha
  • Meena Gopal
  • Bindhulakshmi Pattadath
  • Roshni Chattopadhyay

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14197/atr.201220158

Keywords:

‘ways of seeing’, slavery, unfree labour, bonded labour, workers’ collective efforts

Abstract

This article traces the trajectory of different initiatives to address unfree labour and their impact on workers’ capacity to aspire to and exercise their rights in India. We attempt to understand the dimensions and effects of different ‘ways of seeing’ precarity and exploitation within the larger context of economic policies, social structures such as caste-based discrimination, gender-based violence, and state indifference. In a caste and gender-unequal society such as India, with deep regional disparities, we examine how different lenses have impacted on development-led historical processes of informalisation and flexibilisation of work. We do this by contrasting two different ‘models’ in the country, one in the north in a rural setting and the other in the west in an urban context. Context is important, but the organisations and activists involved in our two case studies saw their role and that of workers differently, operating according to distinct goals and working practices. Our research demonstrates that ‘ways of seeing’ matter, as they lead to disparate results in terms of workers’ capacity to mobilise and claim their rights.

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Author Biographies

Lorena Arocha

Lorena Arocha is Lecturer in Contemporary Slavery at the Wilberforce Institute at the University of Hull. Her research focuses on exploring intersections in policy and practice. She has published and worked on projects evaluating the implementation of child sexual exploitation and trafficking policy in the UK, examining the roles of organisations in anti-trafficking work in South Asia, and evaluating the implementation of services, including provisions for asylum-seeking young people and women in sex work.

Meena Gopal

Meena Gopal is Professor at the Advanced Centre for Women’s Studies, School of Development Studies, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai. She has published and worked on projects related to gender and labour, caste and sexuality, political economy of health, welfare and development, and social movements. She is also a member of feminist and queer collectives in Mumbai, India.

Bindhulakshmi Pattadath

Bindhulakshmi Pattadath is Associate Professor at the Advanced Centre for Women’s Studies, School of Development Studies, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai. She has many years of experience in doing ethnographic research among women labour migrants, particularly women domestic workers, who have migrated from India to the United Arab Emirates and has published on gender, labour, and transnational migration.

Roshni Chattopadhyay

Roshni Chattopadhyay is currently a graduate student at the Anthropology department of Emory University, USA. She has worked as a research assistant on the collaborative project, ‘Worker-driven Initiatives to Tackle “Modern Slavery” in India: A socio-historical pilot study’, housed at the Advanced Centre for Women’s Studies of Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai. Her research interests lie at the intersection of gender, indigeneity, law, state formations, and democratic politics in India.

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Published

28-09-2020

How to Cite

Arocha, L., Gopal, M., Pattadath, B., & Chattopadhyay, R. (2020). ‘Ways of Seeing’—Policy paradigms and unfree labour in India. Anti-Trafficking Review, (15), 137–153. https://doi.org/10.14197/atr.201220158