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COVID-19 and (Im)migrant Carers in Italy: The Production of Carer Precarity

Dotsey, Senyo; Lumley-Sapanski, Audrey; Ambrosini, Maurizio

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Authors

Senyo Dotsey

Audrey Lumley-Sapanski

Maurizio Ambrosini



Abstract

This article explores the impact of COVID-19 restrictions on foreign health workers in Italy. Focusing on caregivers in Lombardia, we explore what we call carer precarity, an emergent form of precarity resulting from pandemic restrictions exacerbating existing socio-legal vulnerabilities. The duality of the carer role—complete household and societal reliance in addition to simultaneous socio-legal marginalization—shapes their precarity. Utilizing data from 44 qualitative interviews with migrant care workers in live-in and daycare facilities that were conducted prior to and during the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy, we demonstrate how the migrant populations working in the care sector were particularly adversely affected due to their migratory status and working conditions. Migrants are excluded from or have differential access to a range of benefits or entitlements and are employed in undervalued work. Workers with live-in employment experienced tiered access to benefits plus the spatiality of restrictions, resulting in their near-complete confinement. Drawing on Gardner (2022) and Butler’s (2009) conceptualizations of precarity, we describe the emergence of a new form of pandemic-induced spatial precarity for migrant care workers at the nexus of gendered labor, limited mobility, and the spatiality of and a hierarchy of rights associated with migratory status. The findings have implications for healthcare policy and migration scholarship.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 7, 2023
Online Publication Date Jun 12, 2023
Publication Date 2023-06
Deposit Date Jun 13, 2023
Publicly Available Date Jun 13, 2023
Journal International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Electronic ISSN 1660-4601
Publisher MDPI AG
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 20
Issue 12
Article Number 6108
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20126108
Keywords care workforce; COVID-19; Italy; precarity
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/21907401
Publisher URL https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/20/12/6108

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