Domestic labour or care work creates the conditions through which other labour can occur, however, the value that this work provides is scarcely recognised when lawmakers consider its remuneration and regulation. This paper investigates legal discrimination against providers of domestic labour in South Africa, especially at home involving women in relationships and domestic workers. This is done by considering how labour law and gender equity law as well as the Constitution produce inequitable outcomes for women providing care services and contrasting the realities of care workers with legal protections. It also considers the ways in which the COVID-19 pandemic has changed the reality of care. Lastly, it outlines the ways in which the law can enable more equitable dispensations of labour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Thomas, Kylie, Masinjila, Masheti, and Bere, Eunice
Subjects
*VIOLENCE, *SEX crimes, *GENDER, *EQUALITY
Abstract
This article draws on research conducted in Kenya, South Africa, and Zimbabwe that focused on violence in the context of political transition. The paperexaminesthe relation between political transition and sexual and gender-based violence in the three countries. The paper argues that it is critical to recognise sexual and gender-based violence as bound to systemic gendered inequality if such forms of violence are to be addressed and mitigated when periods of violent conflict end. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
This paper explores the effects of liberal macroeconomic policies and the economic crisis on informal street traders. Street traders are linked to financial markets and the crisis primarily though demand conditions: slower growth and over-trading translate into lower profits. Field research indicates that female traders' households rely significantly more than male traders' households on income generated by trading. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]