Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Mitigating the Risk of Exploitation and Violence Against Women Indonesian Migrant Workers in The Informal Sector
View through CrossRef
This research aims to analyze the mitigation of the risk of exploitation and violence against women Indonesian migrant workers in the informal sector as well as the responsibilities of the government and migrant employment agencies. Using the normative juridical method, this research examines relevant legal norms, such as the Indonesian Migrant Workers Protection Act, to evaluate the protection of women migrant workers' rights. Data is obtained from documentation of primary and secondary legal sources, analyzed using a feminist perspective to understand vulnerability factors and challenges in the feminization of migration. The results show that mitigating the risk of exploitation and violence against women Indonesian migrant workers in the informal sector includes preventive measures, such as pre-departure education, skills training, recruitment agency supervision, and legal empowerment. During the working period, protection is carried out through standardized work contracts, access to social protection, and bilateral cooperation, while post-work, economic and social reintegration is carried out through mentoring and entrepreneurship training. However, weak implementation of regulations, lack of oversight, and sectoral silos exacerbate the vulnerability of women Indonesian migrant workers in the informal sector to exploitation, discrimination, and rights violations. The responsibilities of the government and migrant employment agencies include legal protection at all stages of migration, from pre-departure recruitment, monitoring of working conditions, and post-employment reintegration programs to ensure that women migrant workers receive comprehensive protection through effective enforcement of employment contracts, legal aid, monitoring, and social reintegration. This research recommends improved regulation, pre-departure education, recruitment agency supervision, legal empowerment, and post-worker reintegration to reduce the risk of exploitation and violence against women migrant workers.
Asosiasi Penelitian dan Pengajar Ilmu Hukum Indonesia
Title: Mitigating the Risk of Exploitation and Violence Against Women Indonesian Migrant Workers in The Informal Sector
Description:
This research aims to analyze the mitigation of the risk of exploitation and violence against women Indonesian migrant workers in the informal sector as well as the responsibilities of the government and migrant employment agencies.
Using the normative juridical method, this research examines relevant legal norms, such as the Indonesian Migrant Workers Protection Act, to evaluate the protection of women migrant workers' rights.
Data is obtained from documentation of primary and secondary legal sources, analyzed using a feminist perspective to understand vulnerability factors and challenges in the feminization of migration.
The results show that mitigating the risk of exploitation and violence against women Indonesian migrant workers in the informal sector includes preventive measures, such as pre-departure education, skills training, recruitment agency supervision, and legal empowerment.
During the working period, protection is carried out through standardized work contracts, access to social protection, and bilateral cooperation, while post-work, economic and social reintegration is carried out through mentoring and entrepreneurship training.
However, weak implementation of regulations, lack of oversight, and sectoral silos exacerbate the vulnerability of women Indonesian migrant workers in the informal sector to exploitation, discrimination, and rights violations.
The responsibilities of the government and migrant employment agencies include legal protection at all stages of migration, from pre-departure recruitment, monitoring of working conditions, and post-employment reintegration programs to ensure that women migrant workers receive comprehensive protection through effective enforcement of employment contracts, legal aid, monitoring, and social reintegration.
This research recommends improved regulation, pre-departure education, recruitment agency supervision, legal empowerment, and post-worker reintegration to reduce the risk of exploitation and violence against women migrant workers.
Related Results
Semiotic Violence
Semiotic Violence
Semiotic violence against female politicians is a subtype of violence against women in politics or VAWP (Krook, 2017), which operates at the level of portrayal and representation o...
Self-employment and health inequality of migrant workers
Self-employment and health inequality of migrant workers
Abstract
Objective: This research aims to discuss the impact of self-employment on health inequality of migrant workers, and explore the mechanism and group differences of ...
Self-employment and health inequality of migrant workers
Self-employment and health inequality of migrant workers
Abstract
Objective
This research aims to discuss the impact of self-employment on health inequality of migrant workers, and explore the mechanism and group differences of ...
Pregnant Prisoners in Shackles
Pregnant Prisoners in Shackles
Photo by niu niu on Unsplash
ABSTRACT
Shackling prisoners has been implemented as standard procedure when transporting prisoners in labor and during childbirth. This procedure ensu...
Migrant Worker Health
Migrant Worker Health
More than 150 million international migrant workers and an unknown number of internal migrant workers toil across the globe. More than workplace exposures affect migrant worker hea...
Women in Australian Politics: Maintaining the Rage against the Political Machine
Women in Australian Politics: Maintaining the Rage against the Political Machine
Women in federal politics are under-represented today and always have been. At no time in the history of the federal parliament have women achieved equal representation with men. T...
Perlindungan Terhadap Pekerja Migran Indonesia Yang Di Tempatkan Ke Negara Konflik Bersenjata
Perlindungan Terhadap Pekerja Migran Indonesia Yang Di Tempatkan Ke Negara Konflik Bersenjata
Abstract—Migrant workers have certain vulnerabilities and risks in the place where they work. Her status as a migrant certainly puts her in a vulnerable and risky situation, especi...
Earning vs Learning: Supporting Myanmar Migrant Education on the Thailand Myanmar Border
Earning vs Learning: Supporting Myanmar Migrant Education on the Thailand Myanmar Border
<p><b>This thesis examines a particular case study of a Migrant Learning Centre on the Thailand Myanmar Border. Previous research has identified a variety of access to ...

