Translate page with Google

Story Publication logo September 9, 2021

These Domestic Workers Have Organized Themselves to Fight For Their Rights

Country:

Authors:
Someone, with their back to the camera, raises their fist during a protest.
English

In Argentina, household workers—95% of whom are women—have been among the hardest hit by the...

author #1 image author #2 image
Multiple Authors
SECTIONS
Women holding fist at protest
Image by Anita Pouchard Serra/VICE. Argentina, 2021.

Read the Spanish version of this report here.

Angélica López looks from across the road at the first apartment she called her own in Buenos Aires, a room located in a house that is painted white, in the Almagro neighborhood. It has windows, and a pastel green railing that matches a palm tree that peeks out over an interior patio.

She lived here in 2016, after having migrated from Peru to Argentina with a family for whom she worked. When that job came to an end, López looked for another one to survive. In the house painted white, they were all workers — people from Peru, Paraguay and Argentina who toiled in factories, or cleaned homes, just like her. López felt safe in Almagro. The bell rang every time someone entered the gate, and she walked the streets with ease.


As a nonprofit journalism organization, we depend on your support to fund more than 170 reporting projects every year on critical global and local issues. Donate any amount today to become a Pulitzer Center Champion and receive exclusive benefits!


But her job didn't last, and her rent kept increasing, making it unattainable. López had to move to a lower-income neighborhood, Villa 1-11-14, where she rents a room that she shares with her eldest son, a student. The pandemic made her life even more difficult — the only job she could sustain was cleaning one house, two days a week, charging by the hour. The 10,000 Argentine pesos ($100 USD) that she earns per month are not enough, and she had to resort to a soup kitchen room during the harshest months of the quarantine.

a woman walks down ally
Angélica López returns to her home in the 1-11-14 neighborhood in the Bajo Flores District. She is a domestic worker and member of The Partido Obrero. Image by Anita Pouchard Serra/VICE. Argentina, 2021.

“We have little chance to prosper,” said López, 52, that day in Almagro at the end of April.

But realities change and López, like many of her companions, is in search of that: possibilities and prosperity. She is part of a wave of women workers who are struggling to be seen and recognized by a society and an economic system that depend on their sweat. Every morning in Argentina, thousands of women undertake a journey, crossing the invisible borders that separate us by highway, by train or bus, leaving one home and entering others.

a woman sits on bus
Angélica López travels to work on a bus during the pandemic. Image by Anita Pouchard Serra/VICE. Argentina, 2021.

According to the Argentine government, around 1.4 million people worked in the "domestic sector" before the pandemic. They are almost entirely women (99 percent), representing 8 percent of the country's workforce and 17 percent of all working women. Almost half are the sole breadwinners in their homes. The vast majority — 76 percent, according to official data — work in informal conditions — that is, without retirement contributions, and without guarantee of payment in case of illness or other labor rights.

A woman holds drum and protest sign
Angélica López and Estela Avila were the spokespeople during a domestic workers protest in front of the Argentine Ministry of Labor. Image by Anita Pouchard Serra/VICE. Argentina, 2021.

For a sector in already unsustainable conditions, the pandemic created an absolute emergency. In response, women workers began to organize themselves collectively, and among themselves, forming new unions that give them the mic to amplify their demands. 

"As much as [the political class] did not want to see mobilizations, there must be, and it will see, because in what way do you make the government listen to your protest, your claim, your concern?" said López. “They won't pay me if I get sick. We have no guarantee anywhere. So if you're wrong, you have to pretend, and go. Because if I don't die from Covid, you're going to starve. "

A protest in front of the ministry of labor
Estela Abila holds the flag of the Atha organization during a protest by domestic workers in front of the Ministry of Labor. Image by Anita Pouchard Serra/VICE. Argentina, 2021.
A woman applies makeup in her bathroom
Estela Abila begins her working day in different houses. Image by Anita Pouchard Serra/VICE. Argentina, 2021.
Women stacking pamphlets about worker rights
Natividad Obseo is the founder of the Amumra organization in the Once district in Buenos Aires. The organization provides help and support to immigrant women, especially domestic workers. Image by Anita Pouchard Serra/VICE. Argentina, 2021.
Visible fliers on women's rights in Argentina
Documentation on the rights of women at the Amumra organization in the Once district in Buenos Aires. Image by Anita Pouchard Serra/VICE. Argentina, 2021.

RELATED TOPICS

navy halftone illustration of a covid virus

Topic

COVID-19

COVID-19
teal halftone illustration of a family carrying luggage and walking

Topic

Migration and Refugees

Migration and Refugees
Three women grouped together: an elderly woman smiling, a transwoman with her arms folded, and a woman holding her headscarf with a baby strapped to her back.

Topic

Gender Equality

Gender Equality
teal halftone illustration of a construction worker holding a helmet under their arm

Topic

Labor Rights

Labor Rights

Support our work

Your support ensures great journalism and education on underreported and systemic global issues