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COVID-19 and the Precarity of Low-income Migrant Workers in Indian Cities
Author(s) -
Jeevan Sharma,
Anurag Sharma,
Anuj Kapilashrami
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
society and culture in south asia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2394-9872
pISSN - 2393-8617
DOI - 10.1177/2393861720975618
Subject(s) - precarity , context (archaeology) , migrant workers , vulnerability (computing) , inequality , demographic economics , social exclusion , sociology , economic inequality , socioeconomics , economic growth , development economics , political science , geography , economics , gender studies , mathematical analysis , computer security , mathematics , archaeology , computer science
Indian cities attract a considerable number of low-income migrants from marginal rural households experiencing difficult economic, political and social conditions at home. Based on fieldwork in Jalandhar and Guwahati, this article focuses on the precarity of low-income migrants in Indian cities. It argues that the concept of precarity, used in the context of migrant labour, should be extended to capture multiple and reinforcing forms of vulnerability, examining the relationship between structural inequalities, including difficult conditions at home, exclusion from public services and poor access to justice. It puts forward a proposition that the widespread media representations of migrant workers returning home in the context of COVID-19 are not simply a result of the sudden outbreak of the coronavirus but that these journeys must be seen as part of the history of the circulatory system of labour.

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