Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/95473
Title: Labouring behind closed doors : the working and living conditions of Filipino live-in care workers in Malta
Other Titles: Emerald studies in finance, insurance and risk management Vol 1 – Uncertainty and challenges in contemporary economic behaviour
Authors: Vassallo, Mario Thomas
Debono, Manwel
Keywords: Filipinos -- Employment -- Malta
Filipinos -- Malta -- Social conditions
Filipinos -- Malta -- Economic conditions
Medical personnel -- Malta
Labor market -- Malta
Immigrants -- Malta
Issue Date: 2020
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Citation: Vassallo, M. T., & Debono, M. (2020). Labouring behind closed doors : the working and living conditions of Filipino live-in care workers in Malta. In E. Ozen & S. Grima (Eds.), Emerald studies in finance, insurance and risk management Vol 1 – Uncertainty and challenges in contemporary economic behaviour (pp. 195-215). Bingley: Emerald Group Publishing.
Abstract: This qualitative study seeks to explore the grounded realities of live-in care workers in Malta. The growing economic affluence in Malta, coupled by an ageing population and the lowest fertility rate in the European Union, is resulting in a greater demand for live-in care givers, particularly from the Philippines. Reinforced through public policy wherein families who employ a qualified live-in carer are benefiting from government subsidy to ease burden on the state's residential homes, Malta appears to be moving from a passive to a more active international recruitment of domestic migrant workers. This inquiry provides an evidence-based contribution to the appeal of the European Economic and Social Committee of the EU calling for more research about the rights of live-in care workers in Europe which has long remained almost invisible to EU and Member State policymakers. The majority of the findings reflect some of the concerns that have already been identified in international literature, like higher levels of precariousness, contractual agreements not being honoured, psychological obligations, fraudulent agents and the lack of separation between work and personal life. Other findings have endogenous characteristics that are closely linked to the island state of Malta, namely its safe environment, Catholic culture, bilingual coexistence of Maltese and English and the competitive nature of Filipino community groups that may discourage further social engagement. The chapter concludes with brief policy suggestions to trigger improvements in the wellbeing and dignity of migrant carers.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/95473
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - CenLS



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