Abstract

ABSTRACT Social location involves multiple axes of gender, work, ethnicity, migration status, age and access to networks; and can be manipulated when the individual determines to change it. These axes of differentiation interact with social hierarchies in different ways to change a person’s social location. Using the social location and intersectionality frameworks, this paper analyses the choices and strategies used by Burmese Gorkha migrant domestic workers in Thailand to manage their workplace relationships. Migrant domestic workers are in a precarious status because of their legal status as migrants and because of the employment relations with their employers. The study finds that Gorkhali migrant workers chose their employers so that they are able to negotiate using their ethnic status. By foregrounding their ethnicity, they are able to obtain certain social location vis-à-vis their employers. However, this strategy can be used only for a certain group of employers and therefore, Burmese Gorkha migrant domestic workers choose to work with such employers even when the pay is lower than that of other groups of employers. Gorkhali migrant domestic workers’ engagements and interactions with their employers are shaped by economic, ethnic and gendered power relations.

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