Arlie Russell Hochschild,
"Love and Gold"
(page 5 of 6)
The notion of extracting resources from the Third World harks back to
imperialism in its most literal form: the nineteenth-century North's
extraction of gold, ivory, and rubber from the South. That openly
coercive, male-centered imperialism—which persists today—was always
paralleled by a quieter imperialism in which women were more central.
Today, as love and care become the 'new gold', the female part of the
story has grown in prominence. In both cases, whether through the death
or displacement of their parents, Third World children pay the
price.
In the classic nineteenth-century form of imperialism, the North
plundered the natural resources of the South. Its main protagonists were
virtually all men: explorers, kings, missionaries, soldiers, and the
local men who were forced at gunpoint to do things such as harvest wild
rubber, latex and the like. European states lent their legitimacy to
these endeavours, and an ideology emerged to support them: 'the white
man's burden' in Britain and la mission civilisatrice in France. Both,
of course, stressed the great benefits of colonization for the
colonized, and enlisted some of the colonized to actively cooperate
with, and even administer colonial rule.
Nineteenth-century imperialism was more physically brutal than the
imperialism of today, but it was also far more obvious. Today the North
does not extract love from the South by force: there are no colonial
officers in tan helmets, no invading armies, no ships bearing arms
sailing off to the colonies. Instead, we see a benign scene of Third
World women pushing baby carriages, elder care workers patiently
walking, arms linked, with elderly clients on streets or sitting beside
them in First World parks.
Today, coercion operates differently. While the sex trade and some
domestic service is brutally enforced, the new emotional imperialism
does not, for the most part, issue from the barrel of a gun. Women
choose to migrate for domestic work. But they choose it because economic
pressures all but coerce them to. The yawning gap between rich and poor
countries is itself a form of coercion, pushing Third World mothers to
seek work in the First for lack of options closer to home. But given the
prevailing free market ideology, migration is viewed as a 'personal
choice'. The problems it causes we see as 'personal' problems. But a
global social logic lies behind them, and they are, in this sense, not
simply 'personal'.
Through this social logic, migration creates not a white man's
burden, but a dark child's burden. We need much more careful research on
the children left behind if we are to find out how such children are
really doing. We need to know further, how these children grow up and
what happens to them when they too become adults and have children. For
anecdotal evidence suggests that the young daughters of women who leave
children behind to migrate for work—when they themselves are grown and
have children—also leave their children behind to migrate for work.
How then are we to respond to all this? I can think of three possible
approaches. First, we might say that all women everywhere should stay
home and take care of their own families. The problem with Vicky is not
that she migrates, but that she neglects her traditional role as mother.
A second approach might be to deny that a problem exists: the care drain
is an inevitable outcome of globalization, which is itself good for the
world. The supply of labour has met a demand for it. The market is
working and the market is always right. If the first approach condemns
global migration, the second celebrates it.
According to a third approach—the one I take—loving, paid childcare
with reasonable hours is a very good thing. And globalization brings
with it new opportunities, such as a nanny's access to good pay. But it
also introduces painful new emotional realities for Third World
children. We need to embrace the needs of Third World societies,
including their children. We need to develop a global sense of ethics to
match emerging global economic realities. If we go out to buy a pair of
Nike shoes, we want to know how low the wage and how long the hours were
for the Third World worker who made them. Likewise, if Vicky is taking
care of a two-year-old six thousand miles from her home, we should want
to know what is happening to her own children.
If we take this third approach, what should we or others in the First
World do? One obvious course would be to develop the Philippine and
other Third World economies to such a degree that their citizens can
earn as much money inside their countries as outside them. We would then
change the social logic that underlies the care drain. Then the Vickys
of the world could support their children in jobs they'd find at home.
While such an obvious solution would seem ideal—if not easily
achieved—Douglas Massey, a specialist in migration, points to
some unexpected problems, at least in the short run (Massey, 1988). In Massey's view,
it is not underdevelopment that sends migrants like Vicky off to the
First World but development itself. The higher the percentage of women
working in local manufacturing, he finds, the greater the chance that
any one woman will leave on a first, undocumented trip abroad. Perhaps
these women's horizons broaden. Perhaps they meet others who have gone
abroad. Perhaps they come to want better jobs and more goods. Whatever
the original motive, the more people in one's community migrate, the
more likely one is to migrate too.
If development creates migration, and if we favour some form of
development, we need to find more humane responses to the migration such
development is likely to cause. For those women who migrate in order to
flee abusive husbands, one part of the answer would be to create
solutions to that problem closer to home—domestic-violence shelters in
these women's home countries, for instance. Another might be to find
ways to make it easier for migrating nannies to bring their children
with them. Or as a last resort, employers could be required to finance a
nanny's regular visits home.
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