Read The Blackwell Companion to Sociology Online
Authors: Judith R Blau
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Immigrant Women and Paid Domestic Work
needs and concerns remained largely `ìnvisible,'' even when highlighted in a
national controversy labeled by some pundits as ``nannie-gate.''
Paid domestic work encompasses multiple tasks ± cleaning, serving, child care,
gardening, and so forth ± and is currently organized in various ways. In this
chapter, I discuss only the employment of immigrant women who do house-
cleaning according to job work arrangements, where they maintain a weekly or
bi-weekly route of employers. Under job work, domestic workers are able to
position themselves as experts to sell their labor services in much the same way a vendor sells a product to various customers, and since they work for different
employers on different days, they are less likely to become involved in deeply
personal employer±employee relations than are live-in domestics or those who
work for the same employer on a daily basis (Romero, 1988).
While job work holds the potential to provide better working conditions and
pay than those encountered by live-in domestic workers, it is still problematic.
Job terms and pay are generally negotiated without the benefit of guidelines
established by government, unions, employment agencies, or private firms, and
domestic workers must locate and secure multiple sources of employment to
survive. My research in a San Francisco Bay area community examined how
immigrant women domestic workers devised ways to improve their employment
in job work, and some of these findings were utilized in an innovative informa-
tion and outreach project in Los Angeles that seeks to upgrade the occupation
for Latina immigrant women. In both the research process and the dissemination
of the research findings, I attempted to incorporate cultural models resonant
with Latino communities. As I gathered research materials, I often acted as a
servidora, an informal social worker, and later in the outreach project, some of the research findings were disseminated through novelas, a popular form of
Latin American print media.
This chapter addresses research, theory, and activism in the context of immi-
grant women who do paid domestic work. I argue that interaction between
sociological research and activism informed by feminism can yield new theor-
etical insights and understandings. First, I discuss and reflect on how a research process informed by feminism shaped a particular set of findings. Feminist
principles shaped the research process by first encouraging me to see immigrant
women as experts in defining their most urgent concerns, thus restraining me
from imposing my own preconceived research agenda, and second inspiring me
to rely on reciprocity. In particular, feminist concerns with reciprocity in fieldwork relationships inspired me to act as a servidora, and this revealed aspects of the occupation that may have otherwise remained concealed. Next, I discuss
how I utilized these research findings in an information and outreach project
aimed at Mexican and Central American immigrant women who do paid
domestic work in Los Angeles. Finally, I reflect on how this process stimulated
further theoretical insights for me. When I returned to ask women in the original community of study for suggestions on some of the materials I had prepared for
use in the Los Angeles outreach project, the comments revealed new insights.
Discussions of theory and praxis often privilege the manner in which research
and theory inform or direct political practices and activities. In this chapter, I Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo
425
suggest a less unilinear relationship between research and theory on the one hand and political activism on the other. In the instance discussed here, the dissemination of the research findings in an advocacy project led to a new understanding
and theoretical interpretations of the research. Research, theory, and activism
run on a feedback loop.
Research and Reciprocity
My research on domestic employment comprises part of a larger study on
migration patterns and changing gender relations among Mexican undocumen-
ted immigrant women and men that I conducted in a Mexican immigrant
community located in the San Francisco Bay area. I chose qualitative methods
± in-depth interviews and participant observation ± in order to develop an
explanation of processes as they unfold at the microstructural level. The materials discussed in this chapter draw mainly from observation and informal con-
versations that occurred in various public and private locales, supplemented by
interviews with 17 women who were working as non-live-in domestic house-
cleaners or had done so in the recent past. All interactions and interviews were conducted in Spanish and research began in November 1986, just as the Immigration Reform and Control ACt was passed, and continued for 18 months.
I had not initially entered the field with the intention of examining how
women organize paid domestic work. As I became immersed in many activities
and groups in this community, I learned that the undocumented immigrant
women there were concentrated in jobs as paid domestic workers in private
households, usually working for different employers on different days. In many
settings, everywhere, it seemed, I saw women talking about how they managed
paid domestic work; I began to focus part of my research on these issues, and as I did, I read books such as Judith Rollins's Between Women: Domestics and Their
Employers (1985) and Evelyn Nakano Glenn's Issei, Nisei, Warbride: Three
Generations of Japanese Women in Domestic Service (1986). The ideas and
approaches used in these studies prompted new questions for me, and so my
ethnographic and interview research emerged in dialogue with some of this
literature.
To date, most studies of domestics are largely based on information gathered
from interviews and historical materials (Katzman, 1981; Dudden, 1983; Glenn,
1986; Romero, 1988, 1992). An exception is Rollins's study (1985), which is
based on interviews with domestic employers and employees and on participant-
observation material gathered by Rollins when she went `ùndercover'' as a
domestic worker, a method that provided a wealth of insights. The novelty and
strength of participant-observation in this study is that it occurred in multiple settings. I did not seek employment as a paid domestic worker, but I interacted
on a regular basis with the women who do the work and I gathered information
at parties, church and community events, and in their homes. Observing paid
domestic workers in their daily social life reveals that many social connections and exchanges undergird what appears to be a privatized economic relationship.
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Immigrant Women and Paid Domestic Work
Ethnographic research involves constant face-to-face interaction over a pro-
longed period of time, and playing different roles offers the researcher different perspectives on social reality. The vantage point from which the researcher
interacts and observes constitutes an important part of the research strategy; it structures the investigation's findings and shapes the parameters of the investigator's research roles and findings (Hondagneu-Sotelo, 1988). My different
roles, besides student/researcher, included activist and community organizer,
friend, nosy person, and servidora. Reciprocity was a central component to all
these roles, but here I wish to focus on how this played out as I assumed elements of what appears to be an autochthonous woman's role in Latino immigrant
communities.
Servidoras are Latina women who act as informal purveyors of information
and who provide referrals and personal services to immigrant families. Two
Chicana women and two immigrant women, one Mexican and the other Gua-
temalan, served a large number of families as community brokers, and I used
them both as role models and sources of information. Although I worked in legal
services and in a bilingual education program in this particular community seven years prior, it was not my old contacts so much as my English language and
literacy skills, and my concurrent involvement in community organizations, that
were valuable. I regularly accompanied individuals and families to collection
agencies and doctor's and lawyer's offices, translated bank statements and
insurance policies, provided updated information on amnesty-legalization provi-
sions, and so forth. My activities as a servidora opened windows to immigrant
lives that would have otherwise remained closed to me. These activities also
opened the windows to a series of ethical issues.
The Ethics of Reciprocity
Ethics in field research generally refers either to covert research, where the true identity and purpose of the investigator remains unknown to those who are
studied, or to the protection of human subjects (Bulmer, 1982). The practice of
reciprocity, a practice consonant with feminist principles, also raises several
ethical issues.
Why use reciprocity in the first place? Reciprocity offers a way to lessen the
asymmetry of doing research among people lacking basic resources, rights, and
power in society. For me, reciprocity was a way to avoid a more colonialist way
of doing research or just entering the field to pillagè`raw data'' for export. It allowed me to engage in more of a mutual exchange, whereby people's time,
efforts, and energy in helping me with my research project were compensated by
some of the resources to which I had access.
But was it less exploitative? In some cases, reciprocity served as an informal
quid pro quo, as an IOU for participation in research. In several instances,
people ± most often men ± offered to pay me cash for my assistance with
filling out forms, translations, or transportation and instead I negotiated their participation in a formal interview (to which they had already agreed, but
Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo
427
were procrastinating). Some of the women with whom I spent a good deal of
time often thanked me for being such a good friend, such a ready and patient
listener. One older woman compared me to a public health nurse she had known,
and another referred to me as à`saint'' for helping poor people in the commun-
ity. Although initially flattered, I grew uncomfortable with these rituals of
deference. The results of my assistance were minimal, and, more importantly,
these same people helped me too. Often when I was praised I would interject
something to the effect of, ``Well I'm a student and I appreciate the help you give me with my project too.'' Although it seemed cold and calculated, I tried to
remind them of my research interest, as it more adequately reflected the
exchange.
Some of the most revealing information I collected did not come from the in-
depth interviews but was disclosed to me in the context of being a friend. People enmeshed in explosive family conflicts or problematic decisions often produced
unedited, but reflective, outpourings of emotions, motives, and private incidents.
Like the best letters and the best diary entries, these outpourings resulted from personal crises. People offer some of the most revealing details of their lives
when they are not relating to one as a researcher. This is double-edged, for
although all the respondents consented to serve as ``human subjects'' in the
research project, it was when I served in capacities other than ``questioning
researcher'' that I obtained some of the most telling information. Acting as a
servidora, I gained detailed knowledge of personal finances, marital intimacies, and conflicts. With regard to paid domestic work, I sometimes wrote letters or
made phone calls on the women's behalf when they asked for pay raises, I
observed the women complain about particular employers or other domestic
workers, and I listened very carefully when they discussed their strategies for
dealing with these problems.
Although all the women knew I was conducting research, my reciprocity
obscured my research intent and availed more information to me. Yet rather
than seeing reciprocity as constituting unbridled coercion or deceit, I believe it made the research process more egalitarian. Although my primary goals were
clearly different than the respondents' interests, our interests did not necessarily conflict. Reciprocity allowed me to exchange a service for what the subjects were giving to me.
Judith Stacey (1988) has argued that researchers acting as friends or advocates
leave subjects open to betrayal, exploitation, and abandonment. While research
relationships are problematic, I maintain that reciprocity in field research can represent an instance where the means justify the means. The traditional appeal
to non-exploitative research generally argues that the ends, or the finished
research product, justifies the means. In this scheme, the dangers and risks
assumed by research participants are outweighed by the potential benefits,
such as a cure for a disease. This justification for the effects of research on
people's lives derives from the physical sciences, and human subjects protocol in the social sciences generally mimics this approach, despite how poorly the
protective clauses translate from the physical to the social sciences (Duster et al., 1979).
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Immigrant Women and Paid Domestic Work
The standard human subjects protocol informs respondents that the end