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Thursday 30 June 2016

Fair care? How Ecuadorian women negotiate childcare in fair trade flower production

Volume 57, July–August 2016, Pages 30–37

  • Department of Sociology, Social Sciences & Media Studies Bldg., University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-9430, USA


Highlights

Ecuadorian mothers working in fair trade flowers have concerns about childcare.
To manage, they developed “gendered economic strategies” (Casanova, 2011).
Their strategies involved diverse childcare arrangements and visions for the future.
These strategies maintain gendered and privatized provision of care.
Fair trade floriculture does not sufficiently support care.

Synopsis

Ethical trade initiatives are one strategy to alleviate the exploitative tendencies of capitalist production for workers in the Global South, but to what extent these initiatives support care is an open question. This study uses qualitative interviews with 38 women workers with children to examine their perspectives about employment and care at a fair trade certified rose farm in Ecuador. Women described generally good working conditions, but highlighted their job's long hours, low pay, and inadequate childcare. Their job necessitated that they organized private “gendered economic strategies” (Casanova, 2011) for securing childcare—strategies which allowed them to provide financial support for their children, but which strained their ability to fulfill gendered expectations about care. Despite its benefits, I argue that fair trade provides insufficient support for care in its standards and production structures. In this case, it falls short of facilitating care arrangements that would further development.
The Chicano Studies Institute at UCSB supported this research by providing funding for interview transcriptions.