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The problems at the
U.S.-Mexico border that have expanded under NAFTA can be understood
by looking closely at the maquiladoras for their impact on women's
lives. Many other perspectives, such as economic class, or
racial attitudes could also be used as the starting point of analysis.
VOICES PROJECT I and II, however, use a gendered lens. This
is a critical view of law and society that operates on the assumption
that the ways in which a culture or society views the male and female
sexes, or explains how and why they are different from each other,
is a useful way for explaining just about anything in life or history.
To use gender is just a starting point of analysis.
It is not exclusive of other important factors, like race,
or economics, or ideology, or culture. It is a totally inclusive
perspective. The gendered lens also assumes that how those
differences are viewed affects in turn how a society or culture
distributes power and resources. In a gendered and patriarchal
world or culture this distribution is usually unequal. In
that unequal distribution, women's differences from men are often
used to justify lower pay, second-class citizenship, objectification
of women's bodies, sexualized harassment and abuse of girls and
women, etc. In essence it is a devaluing of the female in
relation to male, or of the feminine in relation to the masculine,
women to men, girls to boys, etc.
A gendered lens that is viewed holistically, that is with sensitivity
to factors such as race, class, age, sexuality and culture can benefit
greatly from the use of narratives, drawn from the experiences of
women who work or have worked in the maquila industry. The use of
gender at the Mexican border, for example, allows the researcher
to inquire, what role does gender play in explaining any alleged
forms of oppression in the maquiladoras? Why, for example
is it a matter of recorded history and contemporary fact that women
have been so heavily represented as "ideal workers" in
the maquiladoras? How does the working women's gender, and
the Mexican or Anglo attitudes about their class, their sex, their
gender role expectations or their race affect their treatment in
the factories? How does gender intersect with race, class,
sexuality, age, and culture to explain the paltry wages that most
maquiladora workers are paid? Are there specific ways in which
a female maquiladora workers is treated that one would never expect
of a male maquiladora worker? What expectations do factory
owners or supervisors have of working women in the maquiladoras
that they do not have of men, and why?
To use a gendered lens in a way that facilitates analysis of other
factors such as race, class, sex, age, citizenship and/or culture
is engagement of social justice theory with critical practice (i.e.
"praxis"). Here are some specific examples
of working women's experiences that illustrate the ways in which
gender at the border meets class, race, age, sexuality and culture:
A. Gender at work with Mexican patriarchy
- The Mexican woman's gender role is one where she is traditionally
viewed as dependent on men and one who has little experience in
the working world, and thus with making demands for better pay,
or better working conditions. Many Mexican working women
interviewed internalize these attitudes, speaking of factory owners
preferring women "because men created more problems for them."
Meanwhile plant managers believe them to have special qualities
as workers stating, for example, that "females are much less
tolerant of mistakes, poor quality, whatever."
B. Gender at work
with sexist ageism - Factory
owners prefer to hire young Mexican women in the factories because
they are easier to manipulate and exploit. Job security is
equated with allowing herself to become the object of sexualized
attention and with invasions of her privacy. The "Miss
Maquiladora pageant" for example, encourages women to curry
favor from the bosses and supervisors with sexualized and stereotyped
conduct for "ladies." Not surprisingly, such behavior
is viewed as the anti-thesis of an angry and frustrated worker who
seeks to unionize her co-workers and demand better pay, a healthier
and safer workspace or better employment benefits.
C. Gender and pregnancy
discrimination - One extreme example of gender
differences explains a particular form of abuse by maquiladora owners
in the practice of mandatory pregnancy testing for new and current
employees. The irony of the pregnancy tests, which often include
not only "surprise" urine testing but also examination
of menstrual pads to prove that a young workers isn't pregnant,
is that to this day, the industry seeks out young women as workers
because of their "natural ability" to engage in delicate,
fast, repetitive and monotonous work. At the same time a young
woman is more likely to show interest in dating, getting married
and getting pregnant to have a family. Pregnancy testing,
in its various abusive and invasive forms in many maquiladoras unfairly
singles out women for their very gender identity as women.
Narratives supporting each of these examples
may be found in Part III of Voices Voices from the Barbed Wires
of Despair, "Gender at Work". See Articles & Tables
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