Caste, Gender, Labor and COVID-19 in the Urban Informal Economy: A Review of Experiences in Three Selected Sectors
online resource
posted on 2024-10-04, 13:49authored byS. Nanda, K. Seth, M. Suri, R. Uppal, N. Sengupta, S. Sharma
One of the key questions posed in our research within the Rebuild project is to understand how COVID-19 exacerbated pre-existing vulnerabilities for women in the urban informal economy. The backdrop of the pandemic has exposed many layers of social disenfranchisement and vulnerabilities. We situate vulnerabilities fundamentally within the context of historical marginalization and structural inequities that inhibit sections of the population to participate as equal citizens in civic, political and economic opportunities.
We also posit that economic and social vulnerabilities are tightly bound and form webs of vulnerability. A major cross-section of this web is influenced by caste, gender, and labor. Through this review, we intended to explore and showcase how occupational segregation based on certain social hierarchies continues to define who can participate in the economy, in what capacity and implications of this participation during a crisis such as COVID-19. The selection of “cases” in the review is done based on key forms of marginalization observed and evident in literature; in terms of who does what (work), and how were they impacted during COVID-19 and mainstream media reportage on the same. To illustrate the larger web of vulnerability which is rooted in the historical-structural nature of inequality, discrimination, and marginalization, we have looked in depth into women’s experiences within three occupational categories: a)sex workers b) sanitation workers c) bangle workers
History
Publisher
The International Center for Research for Women (ICRW)
Citation
Nanda, S.; Seth, K.; Suri, M.; Uppal, R.; Sengupta, N. & Sharma, S. (2022) Caste, Gender, Labor and COVID-19 in the Urban Informal Economy: A review of experiences in three selected sectors, New Delhi: International Center for Research on Women