March 2, 2021

Profile of Silvia Federici Highlights What She’s Been Saying for Decades, Capitalism Exploits Women. The Pandemic Just Made it Impossible to Ignore.

Since joining the Wages for Housework movement in the early ‘70s, Marxist scholar and activist Silvia Federici has called for more attention to be paid to the sheer scale of social reproduction, more colloquially known as domestic or care work, and how much of it remains unwaged or low-wage, gendered and super-exploitative. 

But now, as the pandemic has thrown millions into unemployment, has affected women disproportionately, and laid bare just how much working people rely on myriad forms domestic care, others are, as this wide-ranging profile in the New York Times magazine suggests, rediscovering the socialist feminism of Federici and her contemporaries, such as Selma James, Angela Davis, and the Combahee River Collective

Federici is perhaps best known for her 2004 book Caliban and the Witch, in which she argued that the transition from feudalism to capitalism required convincing European peasants, often through the most gruesome force, that social reproduction was the “natural” province of women, while waged work was for men. An arrangement that only became more exploitative as European powers began to colonize the Western hemisphere and increase their reliance of slavery.

Especially, but not only, in the US, such social arrangements persist up until the present. Even as ever more women are obligated to enter the workforce, they are still more likely to be responsible for social reproduction, be it having and raising children, maintaining a home, or caring for the elderly. This is in addition to women, especially Black and brown women, being employed in low-wage industries, many of which, like hospitality and domestic care, were the hardest hit by the pandemic.

As the profile notes, such a predicament might be ignored, as it has been for so long, except for the fact that the lockdowns have upended even the comfortable lives of “lean-in” professionals. Jolted into realizing how reliant they are on house-cleaners, domestic care workers, open schools, nurseries, and myriad other things designed to ease the burden of parents there is suddenly an awareness of how exploitative and lop-sided our current system is.

As Federici has noted, and learned from personal experience as a young activist in Parma, Italy, we can’t restrict our perspective to believing that the only thing that constitutes work in this world is that activity for which we’re paid wages. So much unseen, unheralded, and unwaged work, the entirety of social reproduction, is there, too, requiring someone to do it, and usually that’s a woman. 


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In an Uncommon Move, McDonald’s Sues Former CEO

August 20, 2020
Sexual Harassment
It’s not every day that a blue chip company decides to sue a former executive, let alone its erstwhile CEO, but this is exactly what McDonald’s did by suing Steve Easterbrook, who had been fired last year for inappropriate conduct, specifically, sexting with an employee.

The Art of the Doctor’s Note

August 19, 2020
Pregnancy Discrimination
We’ve all needed one at some point –– a doctor’s note explaining that we’re out for the count on some otherwise necessary aspect of work or school, at least temporarily. Many people are realizing that because of COVID, they don’t feel safe at work due to a disability, and need to modify their pre-pandemic job to accommodate this new reality. In this type of situation, what do you ask your doctor for? What does such a note need to include to help you successfully advocate for your rights?

The Week in FFCRA Cases: Judge Invalidates DOL Implementation, Expanding Eligibility

August 18, 2020
Disability Discrimination
Leave
The complaints we found relevant this week are eerily similar—parents who need to take care of their children, some of whom are immunocompromised, are being denied telework or leave or are being terminated. Further, we are continuing to see plaintiffs who voice concerns to their employers about workplace safety being terminated after doing so.

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