Invisible Lives: Gender, Dispossession, and Precarity amongst Syrian Refugee Women in the Middle East

Authors

  • Nergis Canefe York University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7202/1050853ar

Keywords:

Turkey, Middle East, Syrian refugees, refugee women, gender, dispossession, precarity, forced labour, human trafficking, forced migration, political economy of crisis

Abstract

This article attends to the connections between neo-liberal and neo-developmentalist labour regimes, asylum and immigration management, and the exploitation of undocumented, refugee, and migrant women, based on the experiences of Syrian refugee women in Turkey. The concept of precarity is explored as a selectively applied strategy by states to people who lack “status” or who are unable to benefit from “membership rights.” Forced migrants, illegal migrants, and asylum seekers are directly implicated in highly precarious work experiences at the bottom end of labour markets across the Global South, becoming trapped in forced labour and human trafficking arrangements. The article establishes a link between extreme forms of migrant labour exploitation in precarious life worlds and gender-based profiling of life chances.

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Published

2018-06-18

How to Cite

Canefe, N. (2018). Invisible Lives: Gender, Dispossession, and Precarity amongst Syrian Refugee Women in the Middle East. Refuge: Canada’s Journal on Refugees, 34(1), 39–49. https://doi.org/10.7202/1050853ar

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