top of page

Domestic Migrant Workers at the Intersection of Vulnerability

Writer's picture: Silvana LimniSilvana Limni

Updated: Jun 6, 2023

 

In Lebanon, there are approximately 250,000 domestic migrant workers (DMWs) primarily from Sub-Saharan Africa and South and South East Asia. The system that regulates their right to reside and work in the country, called the kafala, by tying the foreign worker to their employer, creates an imbalance of power, which disproportionately favours the employer. DMWs are in a position of accentuated vulnerability under the kafala system due to the nature of their work, their gender, and ethnicity. The combination of economic and financial crisis, the coronavirus pandemic and the explosion in Beirut have highlighted further the harm caused by the kafala system, and the urgency to reform it. In view of the need to prioritize reform at the domestic level, this research paper puts forward recommendations in labour and migration policies, which have at the core the dismantling of the kafala.


By: Silvana Limni

Published on February 7, 2021


Full report available here for download


Comments


ABOUT US 

The Human Development Research Initiative (HDRI) is a think tank co-founded and run by Sciences Po (Paris Institute of Political Sciences) students.

Our ambition is to generate ideas and knowledge to inform policymaking processes, create open spaces for debate and channel intellectual resources for the monitoring and evaluation of public policies. We aspire to become key actors in the policy arena of international development and to bring about change to advance a fair, joint and sustainable development for all. 

Logo HDRI White Version PNG (1).png

STAY IN TOUCH

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

© 2024 by HDRI
Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page