The Intersection of Work and Gender
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in American Behavioral Scientist
- Vol. 42 (4) , 601-627
- https://doi.org/10.1177/00027649921954381
Abstract
This article examines the intersection of U.S. employment and gender relations in the family lives of Guatemalan and Salvadoran immigrant women and how immigration experiences affect gendered perceptions of work. It is based on intensive interviews with 26 Salvadoran women in San Francisco and 25 Guatemalan-ladinas and indigenous women in Los Angeles, complemented with ethnographic observations. The study shows that immigration affects gender relations, sometimes transforming and other times affirming them. Such changes do not depend automatically on entering paid work but on important social processes of working outside the home in the new context. A partial explanation can be found in the interaction between the structure of opportunity that these Central Americans encounter and their own social position, such as their ethnicity and class. This analysis prevents a universalizing of the employment experiences of immigrant women and a portrayal of these women's experiences in simple or unidirectional terms.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Immigrant Kinship Networks and the Impact of the Receiving Context: Salvadorans in San Francisco in the Early 1990sSocial Problems, 1997
- The Immigrant Family: Cultural Legacies and Cultural ChangesInternational Migration Review, 1997
- Migration and Union Dissolution among Puerto Rican WomenInternational Migration Review, 1995
- On the Homefront and in the Workplace: Integrating Immigrant Women into Feminist DiscourseAnthropological Quarterly, 1995
- Repatriation and the Politics of Space: the Case of the Mayan Diaspora and Return MovementJournal of Refugee Studies, 1994
- GENDER, MIGRATION AND SOCIAL CHANGEInternational Sociology, 1991
- POWER, PATRIARCHY, AND GENDER CONFLICT IN THE VIETNAMESE IMMIGRANT COMMUNITYGender & Society, 1990
- Causes of Salvadoran Migration to the United StatesGeographical Review, 1989
- The social meanings of nervios: A case study of a central American womanSocial Science & Medicine, 1988
- Household Arrangements and Multiple Jobs in San SalvadorSigns: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 1979