Ai-jen Poo,
"Domestic Workers Bill of Rights: A Feminist Approach for a New Economy"
(page 4 of 4)
Lessons for a New Economy
Organizing with a feminist approach, DWU organizers have utilized
everyone's connection to and reliance upon "women's work" as the basis
for organizing. They have made the stories of domestic workers central.
They tell the story of the work they do and the pride they feel for the
work. They also tell the stories of the profound vulnerability and
abuses they face. DWU has brought children who were raised by domestic
workers and employers who rely on domestic workers together with
domestic workers and their own children. The power of their collective
stories—as workers and as people who have been the beneficiaries of
their caring labor—demonstrate the power and significance of domestic
work. The campaign has created the space for everyone to take action
from this place of interdependence. They model a world where, in the
words of DWU, "all work is valued equally."
Domestic Workers United is a part of a growing national movement of
domestic worker resistance. They helped to organize the first national
meeting of domestic workers organizations in 2007. After an historic
exchange about organizing strategies, domestic worker organizations from
around the country decided to form the National Domestic Workers
Alliance as a vehicle for domestic workers to build power and raise
their voice as a national force for change. Two years later, the
Alliance has doubled in size. The Alliance has established a National
Training Institute for domestic workers. It is leading campaigns at the
state, national and international levels to enforce existing labor laws
and to establish new labor standards for domestic workers. In 2010,
California domestic worker organizations will be launching their
campaign for the California Domestic Workers Bill of Rights. State by
state, workers are asserting their rights as workers, and they are
challenging the government to take responsibility for mediating their
vulnerability to exploitation.
Understanding the power of Ms. Li and Maria's work can help us to
structurally recalibrate to what is important in life. Some people will
pay more for a pair of shoes than they pay their domestic workers for a
week of work. The historic exclusions of domestic workers reinforce this
system of values. Similarly, the legislature has waited five years to
pass basic legislation to improve the lives of over 200,000 women. There
is no organized opposition to the bill, nor is there a significant cost
to the State of New York, but the bill has not yet become a legislative
priority. The legislature has not yet understood that what seems like a
measure that's specific to domestic workers, actually touches all of us.
A recalibration is needed, and it must be institutionalized in the form
of policy.
The upside-down concentration of the world's resources and wealth in
the hands of a small minority at the expense of the vast majority is in
fact unsustainable for everyone. Domestic worker policy demands that we
recognize and value the basic care that we all require to live and
provides a model for reshaping our economy to serve our collective human
needs. We will need this kind of balance and systemic equity if we are
going to sustain ourselves through the changes and uncertainty to come.
Page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4
|