injustiça hermenêutica e terceirização da mão-de-obra infanto-feminina doméstica

Autores

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12957/childphilo.2020.53130

Palavras-chave:

injustiça hermenêutica, trabalho infantil, direitos da criança, menina

Resumo

Observamos que, apesar das declarações internacionais sobre os direitos das crianças, ainda persiste a mão de obra infantil feminina doméstica terceirizada. Levantando a questão se o trabalho terceirizado de meninas e adolescentes domésticas constitui uma injustiça hermenêutica, respondemos afirmativamente. Confiando em duas narrativas de vítimas indígenas - que são reportagens de jornais - expomos alguns dos horrores que sofrem as meninas e meninos vítimas do trabalho doméstico terceirizado. Comparando essas reportagens com outras narrativas de vítimas de injustiça hermenêutica, como relatado por Miranda Fricker e Hilkje Hänel, argumentamos que as vítimas do trabalho infantil doméstico terceirizado sofrem uma lacuna e interferência hermenêuticas; e que os perpetuadores dessa prática, ajudam a fomentar o que chamamos de "obstrução hermenêutica". Recomendamos diferentes medidas de combate como, por exemplo uma feminização radical dos currículos educacionais, que permitirá a introdução dos recursos hermenêuticos relevantes que as meninas necessitam para dar sentido às suas experiências, nas salas de aula e outros lugares de aprendizagem; o estabelecimento de agências feministas de libertação em todas as escolas, instituições religiosas e hospitais, como formas de aumentar o nível de conscientização sobre os direitos das crianças e adultos; a feminização da legislação e dos processos legislativos, para permitir a promulgação de leis para proteger os direitos das crianças femininas; e a campanha por uma aplicação mais rigorosa das leis sobre os direitos das crianças.

Biografia do Autor

dominic effiong abakedi, University of Calabar, Nigeria

Department of Philosophy,

Lecturer 2

emmanuel kelechi iwuagwu, University of Calabar

Senior Lecturer

Department of Philosophy

mary julius egbai, University of Calabar

Lecturer 2,

Department of Philosophy

Referências

Abakedi, D. E. A critique of metaphysical logical realism. Meta: Research in Hermeneutics, Phenomenology, and Practical Philosophy, 12 (1), 127-142.

Abraham, K. (2020). Crimes on women by women. Retrieved from Vanguard,

http://www.vanguardngr.com/2020/07/crimes-on-women-by-women.

Agra, K. L. R. P. (2020). Epistemic injustice, epistemic paralysis and epistemic resistance: A feminist liberatory approach to epistemology. Kritike, 14 (1), 28-44.

Agwam, C. (2020). Teenage wife kills husband over sex, says she didn’t know its’ marital obligation. Retrieved from Vanguard,

http://www.vanguardngr.com/2020/05/teenage-wife-kills-husband-says-she-didn’t-know-its-marital-obligation.

Baumtrog, M. D. (2018). Navigating a necessary inequality: Children and knowledge-based injustice. Alternate Routes: A Journal of Critical Social Research, 29,

http://www.alternateroutes.ca/index.php/ar/article/view/22459.

Begum, R. (2016). Migrant domestic workers: Overworked and underprotected. Women Across frontiers (4)

http://wafmag.org/201/migrant-domestic-workers-overworked-underprotected.

Birnbaum, R., & Saini, M. (2012). A qualitative synthesis of children’s participation in custody disputes. Research on Social Work Practice, 22 (4), 400-409.

Congdon, M. (2017). What’s wrong with epistemic injustice? Harm, vice, objectification and misrecognition. In M. Congdon, & I. James and J. Kidd (Eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Epistemic Injustice. New York: Routledge.

Crerar, C. (2016). Taboo, hermeneutical injustice, and expressively free environments. Episteme, 13 (2), 195-207.

Dotson, K. (2011). Tracking epistemic violence: Tracking practices of silencing. Hypatia: A Feminist Journal of Philosophy, 26 (2), 236-257.

Elzinga, B. (2018). Hermeneutical injustice and liberation education. The Southern Journal of Philosophy, 56 (1), 59-82.

Fricker, M. (2007). Epistemic injustice: Power and the ethics of knowing. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Giladi, P. (2018). Epistemic Injustice: A role for recognition. Philosophy and Social Criticism, 44 (2), 141-158.

Goetze, T. (2018). Hermeneutical dissent and the species of hermeneutical injustice. Hypatia: A feminist Journal of Philosophy, 33 (1), 73-90.

Hull, G, (2017). Black consciousness as overcoming hermeneutical injustice. Journal of Applied Philosophy, (34) 4, 573-592.

International Justice Resource Center (IJRC). (2020). Child rights. Accessed July 20, 2020,

http://ijrcenter,org/thematic-research-guides/childrens-rights.

International Labour Organization (2013). World Report on child labour: Economic vulnerability, social protection and the fight against child labour. Geneva: International Labour Organization.

International Labour Organization (2020). What is child labour. Accessed July 17, 2020.

http://www.ilo.org/ipec/faacts/lang.

Keshky, M. E., & Samak, Y. A. A. (2017). The development of self-esteem in children: Systematic review and meta-analysis. International Journal of Psychology and Behaviour Analysis, 3, 128.

Kidd, I., Jose, M. & Pohlhaus, G., Eds. (2017). The Routledge handbook of epistemic injustice. New York: Routledge.

Maitra, I. (2018). New words for old wrongs. Episteme, 15 (3), 345-362.

Medina, J. (2017). Varieties of hermeneutical injustice. In I. J, Kidd, J. Medina, & J. G. Pohlhaus (Eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Epistemic Injustice (pp. 41-52). New York: Routledge.

Moors, A. (2003). Migrant domestic workers : Debating transnationalism, identity politics, and family relations, a review essay. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 45(2), 386-394.

Oluwagbemi-Jacob, Egbai, M. J., & Abakedi, D. E. (2018). A General Introduction to Feminist Philosophy: Studies in Feminist Philosophy http://www.amazon.com/General-introduction-Feminist-Philosoph-PhilPhuilosophy/dp/1726434966.

Podolsky, P. (2018). Hermeneutical injustice and animal ethics. Can non-human animals suffer from hermeneutical injustice? Journal of Animal Ethics, 8 (2), http://doi.org/10.5406/janimalethics.8.2.0216.

Richer, P. & de Coninck, S. (2015). Responsible finance and child labour: Quo vadis microfinance? Enterprise Development and Microfinance, 26 (2), 158-174.

Shahvisi, A. (Forthcoming). Hermeneutical injustice and outsourced domestic work. Women’s Studies International.

Tundui, C. S., & Tundui, H. P. (2018). Examining the effect of child labour in the profitability of women owned enterprises: a case of microcredit supported enterprises in Tanzania. Journal of Global Entrepreneurship Research, 8 (2), http://doi.org/10.1186/540497-018-0088-4.

United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) (2020). Legislative reform on child domestic Labour: A gender analysis. United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF).

Usman, E. (2020). Maids as glorified slaves in in Nigeria. Retrieved from Vanguard:

http://www.vanguardngr.com/2020/02/maids-as-glorified-slaves-in-nigeria.

Downloads

Publicado

2020-12-06

Como Citar

abakedi, dominic effiong, iwuagwu, emmanuel kelechi, & egbai, mary julius. (2020). injustiça hermenêutica e terceirização da mão-de-obra infanto-feminina doméstica. Childhood & Philosophy, 16(36), 01–24. https://doi.org/10.12957/childphilo.2020.53130

Edição

Seção

pesquisas / experiências