Toggle Menu

Ai-jen Poo: Domestic Workers and the Roots of Exclusion

Domestic workers, many of them women of color or undocumented immigrants, are one of the most vulnerable labor pools when it comes to workplace abuses and sexual violence.

Francis Reynolds and Emily Douglas

November 2, 2011

Domestic workers, many of them women of color or undocumented immigrants, are one of the most vulnerable labor pools when it comes to workplace abuses and sexual violence. In this video produced by Francis Reynolds and Emily Douglas, activist and director of the National Domestic Workers Alliance Ai-jen Poo talks about some of the issues surrounding domestic workers. She points out that the exclusion of domestic workers—the dramatic undervaluing of their work, the lack of protection from sexual violence and discrimination—has its roots both in the legacy of slavery and in the devaluing of women’s work. “We don’t even recognize all that work that’s happening inside of homes to make the economy run,” Poo says, because it is women who are doing and who have done this work.

Jin Zhao

Francis ReynoldsTwitterFrancis Reynolds is The Nation’s multimedia editor.


Emily DouglasTwitterEmily Douglas is a senior editor at The Nation.


Latest from the nation