Two cases of Asian and Latina immigrant labor in the global economy are Filipina nurses and Latina domestic workers both of which involve immigrant women performing underappreciated and undervalued labor within the United States. Both groups provide essential services in their respective fields of labor and year after year those same people are faced with low pay, long hours, no appreciation, and no job security. Domestic labor is defined as the numerous tasks required to maintain a household such as laundry and cleaning. Reproductive labor on the other hand is work done to replenish the production workers of the world and can include childrearing and cooking meals. Both of these types of labor are something Latina and Asian women are all too …show more content…
Latina domestic workers primarily perform affective and domestic labor. This can include jobs such as caring for children, cooking, cleaning, yard work, grocery shopping, and laundry to name a few. Latina domestic workers have been coming to the United States for over a century, as part of a long history of labor migration from Latin America to the United States. Latinas come to the United States in search of work that they are often unable to find in their home countries. Many of them are driven from their homelands by the economic policies of their governments or by the impact of multinational corporations on their countries' economies. Poverty, unemployment, and underemployment are widespread among Latin American women, and the demand for cheap labor in the United States provides them with an opportunity to improve their economic …show more content…
Filipino nurses have played a significant role in the healthcare industry in America for several decades. They are the largest group of foreign-educated nurses in the United States and have made significant contributions to the healthcare industry by providing quality care and expertise to patients across the country. Filipino nurses have been recruited to work in American hospitals and healthcare facilities since the 1940s, and their numbers have continued to increase steadily over the years. Today, Filipino nurses make up a significant percentage of the nursing workforce in America, and their contributions have been recognized and celebrated throughout the healthcare industry. In this context, it is important to understand the history and experiences of Filipino nurses in America, including the challenges they have faced and the contributions they have made to the healthcare industry. "The first group of Filipina nurses arrived in San Francisco in 1906 as part of the Thomasites, a contingent of more than five hundred American teachers dispatched to the newly acquired Philippine Islands to establish an educational system. By the 1920s, Filipina nurses began immigrating to the United States, with the majority settling in California, which had the largest concentration of