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*Latin American Anthropology Seminar Series @ ILAS*



The Latin American Anthropology Seminar Series is organised jointly by LSE,
Goldsmiths, and the Institute of Latin American Studies and is held on
alternate Thursdays from 17:30 to 19:30. The next session is:



*28 January 2016* – *“Domestic Workers’ Mobilizations in Brazil and the
Struggle for Labour Rights”*, by Louisa Acciari (LSE)



Domestic work is usually described as being a precarious, informal and
highly unequal sector of activity. In most countries, domestic workers are
not even recognised as workers and do not enjoy the same labour rights as
others.  Industrial relations and social movements’ literature quite
unanimously predict that precarious or ‘non-traditional’ workers are harder
to organise and even more so to unionize.



Yet, in some Latin American countries, domestic workers have created trade
unions and recently gained new rights through important changes in national
legislations. In Brazil, the largest employer of domestic workers in the
continent, the category has a quite long history of fighting for their
rights. The first association of domestic workers dates back to 1936, and
local associations were recognised as trade unions in 1988 with the return
to democracy and the new Constitution. The National Federation of Domestic
Workers (FENATRAD) was created in 1997, and affiliated to the biggest
confederation of workers of the country, the Central Única dos
Trabalharadores (Unique Central of Workers – CUT). The FENATRAD is now
composed of 25 local unions from 13 federative states (out of 26), and
represents 133,000 members across the country.



Against all odds, this group of marginalised women have been organising
themselves and demanding equal rights. And most surprisingly, when the
literature predicts that such a group would find alternative or
non-traditional ways of mobilising, Brazilian domestic workers have instead
used the ‘weapons of strong’ and created trade unions. This paper will
explore what made such a mobilisation possible and how Brazilian domestic
workers managed to create their own trade unions. Paying particular
attention to the 2015 law that extends domestic workers’ labour rights, it
will also aim at assessing how successful this process has been.



Venue: Institute of Latin American Studies, Senate House, second floor,
Room 234



For any queries or expressions of interest to participate in the seminar,
you can contact any of the seminar conveners:



Agustin Diz ([log in to unmask])

Clate Korsant ([log in to unmask])

Ainhoa Montoya ([log in to unmask])