o Introduction to Part VI: Gender and the global division of labor, in Global Perspectives.
o Acker, J. (2004). Gender, capitalism and globalization. Critical Sociology. 30, 17-42.
o Freeman, C. Myths of docile girls and matriarchs: local profiles of global workers, in Global Perspectives
o Salzinger, L. Trope chasing: making a local labor market, in Global Perspectives
o Freeman, C. (2009) Femininity and flexible labor: Fashioning class through gender on the global assembly line. In M. Lewin, E.(comp.). Feminist Anthropology. A Reader. 397.
o Hoang, D. (2019). Labour Standards in the Global Supply Chain: Workers’ Agency and Reciprocal Exchange Perspective. Societies, 9(2), 38.
o Hondagneu-Sotelo, P. New world domestic order, in Global Perspectives
o Parreñas, R. S., & Silvey, R. (2016). Domestic workers refusing neo-slavery in the UAE. Contexts, 15(3), 36-41.
o Hondagneu-Sotelo, P. Preface to 2007 edition. In Domestica: Immigrant Workers Cleaning and Caring in the Shadows of Affluence.
o Parreñas, R. (2000). Migrant Filipina domestic workers and the international division of reproductive labor, Gender and Society, 560-581.
o Parreñas, R. (2012). The reproductive labour of migrant workers. Global Networks
o Flippen, C. A. (2016). Shadow labor: Work and wages among immigrant Hispanic women in Durham, North Carolina. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 666(1), 110-130.
o Toro-Morn, M., Guevarra, AR., & Flores-González, N. (2013). Introduction: Immigrant women and labor disputes. In Immigrant Women Workers in the Neoliberal Age. Pgs 1-18.
o Levitt, P. (2004). Salsa and ketchup: Transnational migrants straddle two worlds. Contexts, 3(2), pp.20-26.
o Toro-Morn, M. (2013). Elvira Arellano and the struggles. In Immigrant Women Workers in the Neoliberal Age. pgs 38-55.
– please e-mail to me