1st Edition

No Place Like Home Organizing Home-Based Labor in the Era of Structural Adjustment

By David Staples Copyright 2007
    186 Pages
    by Routledge

    186 Pages
    by Routledge

    No Place Like Home examines the emergence of home-based women workers as paradigmatic figures of contemporary capitalism, neoliberal governmentality, and socio-political contestation. Far from an isolated or contingent situation, home-based work constitutes today an enormous arena of 'invisible' social and political struggles of subaltern and ethno-racially subordinated women.

    Table of Contents

     

    Acknowledgments

     

    Introduction: The Invisible Threads of Homeworker Organizing

     

    One: The Turbulent World of Home-based Work

     

    Two: ‘No Place Like Home’: Marxist and Feminist Topographies of House and Homework

     

    Three: Homeworker Organizing: Child-care Workers Under Welfare Reform in the United States

     

    Four: Child-care Workers In and Against the State

     

    Five: The Biopolitics of Homework

     

    Six: Political Economy and the Unpredictable Politics of Women’s Home-Based Work

    Notes

    Works Cited

    Index

    Biography

    David Staples is on-leave as the Development Director of Tenants & Workers United, a grassroots organization based in Northern Virginia. He is currently a Postdoctoral Research Scientist and Visiting Associate Lecturer in Women’s Studies at George Washington University, where he is supporting the Women In and Beyond the Global Prison Project. Mr. Staples has a Ph.D. in sociology from the CUNY Graduate Center and has taught at Long Island University in Brooklyn, York College and Queens College, CUNY.