Abstract
It is widely acknowledged that Singapore’s labour-migration regime is unequal and bifurcated, with migrants that are categorised as foreign professionals afforded many more rights than those categorised as migrant workers. While migrant construction, process, and shipyard workers are expected to reside in dormitories or other shared accommodation, migrant domestic workers are mandated to live in their employers’ homes, where their gendered bodies are confined and disciplined. Based on ethnographic fieldwork, in this article I demonstrate that Singapore’s labour-migration regime is underpinned with a carceral logic that imposes bodily controls on domestic workers through policy, legal regulations, and practices which, I argue, constitute gendered disciplinary apparatuses. Moreover, by examining migrant domestic workers’ everyday experiences, I suggest that different dwelling spaces – namely, employers’ homes and shelters – can be conceptualised as carceral domesticities. Utilised by the state as carceral infrastructure, I show the ways in which these dwelling spaces become geographies of detainment and punishment, in/through which different actors become involved in disciplining intimacy, morality, and maintaining socio-racial order in the nation. Simultaneously, the carceral nature of the labour-migration regime produces forms of domesticity which relies on the containment of migrant workers.
Introduction
I sat with Meri on a concrete bench in the shade, overlooking the coast where countless ships were visible in the evening’s rosy haze. I’d known that Meri was feeling homesick and that she missed her children, but she seemed particularly melancholic as we sat together looking out across the Singapore Straits. Nearby, there were several groups of migrant workers talking loudly, some having barbeques, others laying on mats and singing along to music. The celebratory and excited energy of our neighbours felt jarring, as Meri’s eyes gently glossed over and filled with tears. Meri sighed, pressing both eyes and wiping her tears away. After a long pause, she placed her hand on my knee and said “I just want this to be over now, this waiting, my life on hold, you know, I just want to hold my sons”. I put my hand on hers and squeezed it tightly. I knew that I couldn’t say anything that would help, so we just sat.
I had met Meri in the HOME (the Humanitrian Organisation of Migration Economics) shelter two months prior, when she arrived having fled physical violence in her employer’s home. I had already been volunteering at the shelter for four months at this point, and had spent most weekdays supporting HOME by running activities, doing casework,1 and fulfilling any other role that was required of me (which sometimes involved accompanying residents to employment agencies, medical appoitnments, or court). As an organisation which advocates for migrants’ rights, HOME provides legal, medical, and emotional support for its shelter residents. While I was coducting fieldwork, the shelter was always filled with over 50 residents, with a huge amount of flux. When Meri first arrived at the shelter, as I had many times before, I explained who I was and my role as both a volunteer and researcher. I told her that I would happily include or omit anything she shared with me from my research, dependent upon her desires. While many of the other residents were quieter inititally, Meri, who I learned was a 28-year-old Indonesian woman from a small coastal city in East Java, quickly asserted: “my story should be told so this [employer abuse and violence] can stop”. Determined to leave Singapore and return to care for her two sons in Indonesia, at our intial encounter, Meri was insistent: “I am making this report and then I go … Singaore is not good for me”.
Two months later, as we walked back to the shelter from the park, Meri expressed her anger at being forced to remain in the country while the police conducted their investigations. She stated, “firstly I am stuck there [in her employer’s home] and now, I am still stuck [in the shelter and Singapore more generally] … before, maybe I could leave [the country], but now cannot even do that.” This was not the first time Meri had commented on the confinement and entrapment she felt in Singapore. It was, however, the first time (though not the last) that I had heard her express that it was in the shelter that she felt her immobilty the most accutely. As we reached the entrance, Meri left me with a set of rhetorical questions that lingered with me throughout the remainder of my time conducting fieldwork. She said: “whenever I am walking in here, I always think, why am I the one being punished? Why is it me that is not free?” While this was not the first time I had thought of the shelter as a site of entrapment, it was the first time I came to see it clearly as a carceral space and place of detainment.
Despite being vital to the functioning of the nation, the Singaporean state has come under scrutiny for the labour abuses that migrant domestic workers are subjected to (HRW, 2022). Terms such as exploitation, abuse, neo-slavery, violence, and unfreedom/unfree are widely utilised when commenting on migrant domestic workers’ experiences, with the state, employers, and employment agencies also coming under scrutiny for their role in producing these conditions (Bal, 2015a; Huang and Yeoh, 1996, 2007; Ong, 2009; Parreñas et al., 2021; Yeoh et al., 2020). Despite this, the punitive and disciplinary nature of the labour-migration regime has not been conceptualised as carceral. Drawing on ethnographic research and interviews both within and beyond the HOME shelter, in this article I demonstrate that Singapore’s labour-migration regime is underpinned with a carceral logic. As I will come to explain in more detail, I use the term ‘underpinned’ with purpose, as it not only suggests that something is reinforcing and foundational, but also brings to mind a structure which is both bracing and rigid. Beyond this, I contend that within this carceral labour-migration regime, the policy and regulations that govern the domestic worker population can be understood as gendered disciplinary apparatuses (Legg, 2011, 2014), while employers’ homes and shelters are utilised as carceral infrastructure: through/in which intimacy, morality, and the socio-racial order of the nation are attempted to be managed. As I will come to show, and as Meri’s account suggests, Singapore’s labour-migration regime produces both the HOME shelter and employers’ homes as carceral domesticities: geographies of detainment, dehumanisation, punishment, and gendered bodily control. Despite the shelter residents also attesting to the gratitude they had for HOME and their (conflicting) feelings of safety and homeliness, like their employers’ homes, this was a site where state- and non-state actors were involved in (re)producing and maintaining a regime which functions by enforcing confinement.
Carcerality and immigration: Intersecting regimes
It has long been established that carceral and migratory regimes are intimately connected, with immigration detention/removal centres preeminent examples of this. Indeed, carceral geographers have demonstrated the importance of the ‘punitive turn’ (Cassidy et al., 2020; Moran, 2015; Moran et al., 2018) and the relationship between punishment, carcerality, and immigrant deterrence, control, and removal (Loyd et al., 2012; Moran et al., 2016; Mountz et al., 2013). While largely US- and Euro- centric, there has also been important scholarship which explores the practices and processes of colonisation, and the ways in which punishment, discipline, and carceral governmentalities have shaped societies historically and contemporarily (Legg, 2014, 2023; Radics, 2023; Sen, 2000, 2012). However, Cassidy et al. (2020) point to the significant and somewhat surprising theoretical and empirical gaps at the intersection of carceral and labour geographies. They suggest that labour geographers’ engagement with carcerality and punishment can offer important (and currently lacking) insights into embodied and everyday labour experiences. In an effort (at least in part) to address this void, in this article I suggest that our understanding of Singapore’s labour-migration regime is enriched by attending to its carceral underpinnings. As forementioned, I use the term ‘underpin’ (or underpinned/underpinning) with purpose, as it denotes both reinforcement and something which is foundational: a structure or system, which is bracing, rigid, and stabilising, despite often being hidden and ignored. While labour-migration in Singapore has been conceptualised as unfree and punitive (Yea and Chok, 2018), its carceral underpinnings have been inadequately explored. By exposing this, I draw attention to the gendered disciplinary apparatus that govern migrant domestic workers in Singapore, while also demonstrating how employers’ homes and shelters are both utilised as infrastructure, rendering them carceral domesticities. Indeed, specific forms of domesticity are simultaneously produced, with employers’ homes and shelters becoming sites of population control, where migrant workers are regularly confined and punished.
While the term carcerality is widely used in academia, there is some ambiguity around its meaning. For Tapia (in (French et al., 2020) ), carcerality is a term that “captures the many ways in which the carceral state shapes and organizes society and culture through policies and logic of control, surveillance, criminalization, and un-freedom”. Beyond the creation of “policies and logic”, the processes of shaping and organising, to which Tapia refers, see states develop carceral-/penal-infrastructure: prisons; detention centres; camps; and borders. These ‘walls’ and ‘cages’ (Loyd et al., 2012) are said to warehouse populations (Alexander, 2010; Herivel and Wright, 2003), with Gilmore (2007: 13–14) explaining that four (conflicting but overlapping) theories provide “explanations for why societies decide they should lock people out by locking them in …. retribution, deterrence, rehabilitation, or incapacitation.” While utilising imprisonment for retribution and to incapacitate, the Singapore Prison Service still enforces both corporal and capital punishment while stating its mission to be one of ‘correction’ or rehabilitation. As geographers have demonstrated, however, carcerality and carceral conditions operate on a spectrum (Hamlin and Speer, 2018; Moran et al., 2018). Building on Foucault’s concept of the carceral continuum, for instance, Hamlin and Speer (2018) suggest that carcerality is enacted across an array of sites, in different ways, and at different ‘intensities’. As such, we can understand varying built forms and spaces as carceral, with public housing (Hamlin, 2020) and day labour/employment agencies (Peck and Theodore, 2008) brought to the fore as physical and social infrastructures of carceral regimes.
Despite containment and immobilisation remaining central tenants of imprisonment, carceral geographers have explored the relationship between carcerality and both mobility and migration (Gill, 2009; Martin and Mitchelson, 2009; Moran et al., 2012; Turner and Peters, 2017). From studying the movement of incarcerated or detained people (Conlon and Hiemstra, 2014; Moran et al., 2012, 2016), to exploring how maritime governance allows for migrants to be held outside of juridical order (Dickson, 2021), scholars have demonstrated “the expansive function of mobility within carcerality” (Dickson, 2021: 2). Immigrants have also been criminalised in wide-ranging ways and contexts. As Douglas and Sáenz (2013) explain, the development of immigration law in the US was inextricably connected to race and racism, as it sought to restrict access only to people deemed (racially) desirable. In addition to restricting immigrants from entering the US, De Genova (2018: 23) also comments on the ways in which deportation was developed as a means of racial exclusion: … provisions for the deportation of ‘undesirable’ migrants were only enacted as a means of enforcing the explicitly racist Page Act of 1875 … deportation was first enacted not against all non-citizens … but rather as a technique for the exclusion of a particular, expressly racialised, and racially denigrated category of transnational human mobility.
Beyond the US, many contemporary migration regimes utilise punishment to criminalise not only migrants, but also brokers and other actors involved in facilitating migration. For instance, as a response to reports of the abuse of migrant domestic workers in Singapore, and to tackle concerns about trafficking, the government of Myanmar not only banned its citizens from migrating to take on this labour between 2014 and 2019, but simultaneously criminalised the brokering of this migration (Deshingkar, 2021). Meanwhile, once in Singapore, migrant workers can be deported by their employers and then ‘blacklisted’ (and barred from future entry to the country) for violating the conditions of their work passes. As I will come to show, the nature of these violations and the regulations governing different immigrants are gendered, racialised, and classed. Indeed, the very threat of permanent removal is argued to discipline migrant workers, as employers can suppress insubordination, compel compliance, and even coerce their employees to sign documents which authorise low salaries or poorer working conditions (Bal, 2015; Yea and Chok, 2018). Where agencies and brokers were targeted by punitive migration policy in Myanmar, employment agencies and other non-state actors are also used to enforce immigration control and removals in Singapore. Wise (2013) highlights the role of ‘repatriation companies’, for instance, suggesting that despite their use of violent and unlawful practices being known, they continue to conduct governmental- and employer-approved deportations. She writes, it is common knowledge that these agents are frequently engaged by unscrupulous employers to dispatch workers whom they can no longer afford to pay, who threaten to complain and pursue back pay, or who are seeking funds to treat work-related medical injuries. (Wise, 2013: 438) [f]or Singapore, a nation whose legal system was constructed by the British precisely to suppress dissidence and extract wealth through imported labor, strict migration policies and punitive measures to discipline diverse populations are historically ingrained.
Domestic workers, disciplinary apparatus, and Singapore’s carceral labour-migration regime
Singaporeans must realise and accept as desirable the need for more of the able and the talented to come to work in Singapore … We have to make these people feel welcome and wanted, so that they will make Singapore their permanent home … Instead of getting high quality men; we have imported over 150,000 unskilled workers … Instead of importing first-class brains, we have imported unskilled brawn. (Lee Kwan Yew – Singapore’s first Prime Minister after independence – 1982)
It is argued that Singapore has a bifurcated labour-migration regime, with levels of assumed skill (and the gendered, racialised, and classed assumptions that this entails) determining how immigrants are incorporated into the nation (Yeoh, 2006). While the state has an inclusive approach to migrants defined as foreign professionals (Rahman and Kiong, 2013; Yang, 2022), with routes available for them to attain permanent residency, transience is enforced for those described as foreign/migrant workers. As the extract from Lee Kwan Yew’s 1982 speech (above) reveals, actively recruiting migrants that are considered to be skilled has long been a state strategy to promote economic development. As this speech also reveals, those migrants described as talented, or ‘brains’, have long been set in opposition to migrant workers, who are here described as ‘unskilled brawn’. As Poon (2009: 83) writes, “[i]n contrast to the welcome and flexible freedoms extended to foreign talent in Singapore, the state subjects low-wage foreign workers to stringent regulation and disciplinary control.”
Despite being essential to the social and economic functioning of the nation, the 1,000,000+ migrant (domestic, construction, shipyard, and factory-/process-) workers in Singapore are only able to migrate on temporary contracts, which can be renewed for short periods until state-enforced age limits are reached. Their disposability (De Genova, 2002; Pratt et al., 2017; Tadiar, 2013; Wright, 2006) and temporary status are legally enshrined, with financial levies used to control their numbers and ensure Singaporeans are preferentially employed where possible.3 Unlike migrant professionals, migrant workers are also unable to move with dependents and cannot change employment without signed permission from their employer (Pareñas et al., 2021). Employers can also take their employees to the airport to ‘repatriate’/deport them more or less at will.4 This is a disciplinary apparatus (Pareñas et al., 2021) which, as Ong (2009) argues, effectively renders employers into border agents, as they can control migrant workers’ (un)freedom and (im)mobility. Despite being employed to work in Singaporeans’ homes – and to facilitate others’ home-making – migrant domestic workers’ transient status creates barriers for them to make home on their own terms.
In addition to the generic legislation governing migrant workers more broadly, domestic workers are then subjected to additional gendered bodily controls. They are required to live in the homes of their employers, where “adequate” food, “acceptable” accommodation, and “adequate” rest are to be provided (Attorney-General's Chambers of Singapore, 2023, online). Moreover, while all migrant workers are required to undergo medical examinations before their work passes are issued,5 domestic workers are also obligated to undergo pregnancy testing every six months. First legislated in 1986, domestic workers found to be pregnant are not only forced to leave Singapore, but can then be blacklisted, preventing them from entering Singapore again. Moreover, the Employment of Foreign Manpower Regulations specifically state that while employers are required to obtain medical insurance to cover accidents and workplace injuries, it cannot include “any psychiatric or nervous or mental disorder”; “any sexually-transmitted disease”, or “any pregnancy, childbirth, miscarriage, abortion, sterilisation, menopause, or any complication arising from any of these conditions” (Attorney-General's Chambers of Singapore, 2023, online). As such, within Singapore’s ‘crimmigration’ regime (Armenta, 2017) the state has adopted a medico-legal strategy, which sees pregnancy criminalised (Cheang, 2021); an act/outcome which is determined to be deserving of punishment. The implementation of this policy not only compels domestic workers to self-police but also enlists employers in the removal of domestic workers’ liberties. Until January 2010, employers were liable to lose the S$5000 security bond that they are required purchase if their domestic worker were to get pregnant (MOM, 2011). While this fine no longer stands, it is argued that employers’ concerns about the potential of a domestic worker becoming pregnant prevail, contributing to their continued bodily surveillance (Constable, 2020). As Poon (2009 : 83) explains, these “bio-policing measures …restrict reproduction and produce specific forms of embodiment.” Reflecting on the experience of a shelter resident who she learnt was pregnant, a HOME volunteer, Marley, expressed her despair with what she referred to as an “excessively harsh” policy. In an interview, she stated: I don’t get it, I mean, isn’t it enough that they [pregnant domestic workers] can’t stay in the country even if they wanted to? Sometimes it’s a Singaporean’s baby, or they’ve been assaulted, you know? I don’t understand why it’s not case by case. For Kristine [a shelter resident], she didn’t want to be pregnant … why can’t she then come back in future? Why punish her?
By controlling marriage, pregnancy/birth, and disciplining intimacy, the Singaporean state is able to maintain population control and socio-racial order within the nation, which are, as forementioned, long-standing concerns. This approach also ensures that the state bears no burden for migrant domestic workers’ current or future personal/social reproduction. As such, while migrant domestic workers are employed to support Singaporeans in meeting their own reproductive and caring labour needs, they are, as Constable (2020: 3492) writes, “discursively and legally constructed as ‘just workers’ and not as reproductive or sexual beings”. Moving beyond this, I would contend that the policy and legislation that frame domestic workers as disposable and in need of bodily management can be conceptualised as gendered disciplinary apparatuses (see: Legg, 2011, 2014). Encompassing a range of practices, institutions and actors, the bodily management of domestic workers not only allows the Singaporean state to regulate and control socio-racial order of the nation, but to maintain and reinforce gendered, ethnic/racial, and classed norms and power dynamics. Moreover, these disciplinary apparatuses also reveal just some of the ways in which Singapore’s labour-migration regime can be understood as being underpinned by a carceral logic. The punitive nature of the policy and legislation governing domestic workers not only relies on self-policing and surveillance but also draws on the carceral logic of deterrence and retribution when transgressions do occur (Gilmore, 2007). These facets are both foundational and rigid, as the state’s economic approach and aspirations rely on a labour-migration regime that also meets its demographic aims and does not interfere with the socio-racial order of the nation. While obscured, another important facet of this carceral underpinning is in its efforts to shape and mould the behaviours and actions of migrant workers. This can be understood as an effort to rehabilitate (Gilmore, 2007).
Having established some of the ways in which Singapore’s labour-migration regime is underpinned by a carceral logic, I now turn unpacking the everyday experiences of migrant domestic workers while they are either in employment or living in shelters (when living and working in their employers’ homes is no longer viable). In so doing, I demonstrate that employers’ homes and shelters are both experienced and constructed as geographies of confinement, surveillance, and punishment, as sites which incapacitate. Moreover, I argue that these sites can be conceptualised as infrastructure of a carceral regime and can, therefore, be understood as carceral domesticities.
Geographies of confinement, surveillance, and punishment: The production of carceral domesticities
Many of the domestic workers I spoke to in Singapore referred to their employers’ homes as prison-like. More explicit statements such as “it’s like I am a prisoner”; “you know, I am locked in there, cannot get out”; “I think even the amah [her employer’s mother], she feel like it’s like a jail too” featured in interviews, alongside comments which pointed to feelings of entrapment and confinement, and/or the punishment embedded within these sites: “that place, they always shouting at me to do better, but how? I do everything my best already … I just need to get out, can’t stay trap there anymore”. After a few months of volunteering with HOME, and as I developed friendships and relationships of reciprocal care and trust, the residents started to share their feelings about the shelter. Somewhat surprisingly to me at the time (though not upon later reflection), the comments that residents made about the shelter mirrored those about their employers’ homes. While most residents acknowledged feeling safe and cared for, many also attested to simultaneously feeling trapped and as though they were being punished. Like Meri, some residents drew direct comparison between the two dwelling spaces, while others clarified certain distinctions: “here [the shelter] I am stuck but not like in my employer, here I still feel OK, feel safe, not like there”.
Just as carcerality and migration are inextricably linked, so too is carcerality and the domestic sphere. Prisons, camps, and detention centres are all, for instance, sites where homemaking takes place (Blunt and Dowling, 2006; Hammond, 2004; Stoller, 2003). Feminist geographers have also demonstrated that home can be experienced differentially (Brickell, 2012; Meth, 2003). hooks (1990), for instance, highlights the dehumanisation and violence that black women experienced when working in the homes of white families, while their own ‘home places’ were sites of liberation and restoration, where care and resistance were fostered. While home is often simplistically assumed to be a site of belonging and safety, then, it can also be a site of (invisibilised) labour, fear, isolation, and confinement which can be associated with violence, displacement, and/or loss (Meth, 2003). For these reasons, ‘home as prison’ is a widely understood metaphor. In Singapore, while domestic workers’ experiences of oppression and violence in their employers’ homes has been widely addressed, the unequal power relations within these sites continue to be masked by the rhetoric that they are “one of the family” (Huang and Yeoh, 2007).
Of course, the houses and homes can also be sites of state imprisonment. House arrest, electronic monitoring, and geo-locating technologies are able to extend carceral space (Gill et al., 2018), with homes/housing utilised as carceral infrastructure. While acknowledging that the ‘intensity’ of the carceral experience and peoples’ (un)freedoms and bodily suffering differs vastly across the spectrum of different carceral sites (Hamlin and Speer, 2018), I now demonstrate how the Singaporean labour-migration regime produces employers’ homes and shelters as carceral domesticities: as geographies of confinement, surveillance, and punishment.
Employers’ homes
I met Richelle through her cousin, Merilyn (a shelter resident), on a Sunday in late April. I had been invited to attend a barbeque for a friend’s birthday celebration so arrived with some muffins, unsure of exactly what to expect. It was a hot day, even by Singaporean standards, so I was relieved when I saw Merilyn was sitting with a group by a barbeque pit under a huge tree that was casting shade widely. Upon my arrival, and before introducing me to the person whose birthday we were there to celebrate, Merilyn excitedly called Richelle over to introduce us to one another. Richelle was younger than her cousin, aged 24, and was initially very shy. She spoke quietly, raising her hand slowly to wave gently as she said, “nice to meet you”.
While the celebrations were ongoing, I sat on a plastic woven mat with Richelle, as she told me that she had moved to Singapore only five months before. She had made the difficult decision to leave her six-year-old daughter, Rosa, in the care of her mother, with the hope of providing her with a “better future”. She explained that since her arrival, this had only been the second time that she had been allowed to leave her employer’s home. She clarified, “before I get my salary, cannot have [a day] off”. After working for over 4 months without a salary in order to repay the debt she owed her employment agency, a common practice in Singapore, Richelle expressed how happy she was to have finally remitted some money and to have gained a weekly day off. Smiling, she affirmed, “I feel a big weight is off me now”. She also, however, expressed her anxiety, as she was nervous about navigating around Singapore and ensuring she would get back to her employer’s home in time for her curfew. Hearing this, Merilyn shook her head and tutted loudly in objection. Richelle looked back at her and shrugged. Merilyn then revealed that Richelle had already missed the church service they had planned to attend together that morning, as she was making her employers’ breakfast. Merilyn was frustrated that Richelle was also expected to return by five, in order to have time to prepare dinner. At this point, our conversation was interrupted by an announcement that the food was ready.
As we stood and were each handed a white paper plate and some plastic cutlery, Richelle pointed at a cake which had been baked in a disposable tray. Smelling the slice she cut for herself, she said, “now I can really feel a taste of home. I was so sick of always eating bread and tau kwa [a kind of tofu]”. A few hours later, as I was getting ready to leave, I overheard Richelle and Merilyn talking about bus stops and routes. It was only three o’clock, but Richelle was feeling anxious. Insisting that she would prefer to be back early so that she could keep her employers happy, she decided to leave when I did. As we walked away, she sighed, affirming, “it’s better like this, then she [her employer] won’t be angry. Then [if she is late] my week will be more difficult”.
Richelle was one of many domestic workers that I met who both had a curfew on their ‘day off’ and had not been given a day off until her debt had been repaid. Indeed, I met employers and employment agents who also attested that these practices were not only common but, in their eyes, reasonable. As one agent confirmed in an interview: If employer need them to make breakfast, need them to get the children ready, or whatever they need, then not too much to ask anyway …. They still going out, going to get rest, they can feel happy about that … salary deduction, some employers say off day is OK, but some don’t … I suggest they don’t actually … plenty of time later. (interview with employment agent, 2017)
The fairly mundane interactions between Richelle and Merlyn at the barbeque demonstrated just some of the unfreedoms and stresses that domestic workers are subjected to. Unable to control their time (even on their day off), confined to their employers’ homes for extended periods, and unable to even choose what they eat, domestic workers experience a range of spatial, temporal, and bodily controls within and extending from their employers’ homes. Indeed, many of the conversations I had with domestic workers on their days off were centred on their employers’ homes. At the barbeque, Richelle, Merilyn and their friends’ conversations about family, intimate relationships, bodily aches and pains, foods that were missed, and their favourite places to visit all seemed to circle back to their employers’ homes. Conversations about their children would lead on to discussion about their employers’ families. Foods were missed because of the often arbitrary and sometimes cruel restrictions that were placed upon them at mealtimes. And the bodily aches and pains they highlighted were often a result of uncomfortable sleeping arrangements or gruelling manual labour requirements.
A few months after the barbeque, I interviewed Merilyn, who explained that when she was first employed in Singapore, she, like Richelle, had not been given a day off for four months. She explained that once she had been given a day off (only two days per month), she had also been given a curfew. She said, “seven [pm] at least, and can leave anytime in the morning, but sometimes they leave lots to do”. When describing an ordinary working day, Merilyn explained that she would be expected to wake by 5 a.m. to prepare breakfast for the five household members and to get the children’s clothes and school bags ready. At this time, she was allowed to eat three biscuits for breakfast, shaking her head in disdain as she stated, “only three, what does she think, I am same like a baby?” Merilyn would then spend the day cleaning, washing their two cars, washing their clothes, and cooking for them in the evening. Merilyn would go to bed each evening at about midnight. When I commented how little sleep she was getting, she surprised me as she explained, “it’s OK for me to sleep five hours, it’s enough, but [I] has to keep waking some nights, to give the organic medicine, then it’s not OK”.
In addition to this exhausting daily routine, Merilyn was asked to go to the market three to four times a week, to buy groceries. This was a time she looked forward to, a moment of peace outside of her employers’ four walls that she described as “time where I am free”. On these outings, she said that she would often stop by a small stall to buy herself some food. Always hungry, she occasionally took the opportunity to buy some food. She would also try to bring snacks back to her room but explained that she would have to be careful, hiding them under her arm and then pillow as there was CCTV in her employer’s home, a technology which disciplined through the potential of constant employer surveillance. As such, Merilyn’s employers’ home became a geography of confinement and surveillance, where she was subjected to a myriad of unfreedoms that most other employment would/could not impose. Indeed, being required to live with her employers meant that Merilyn’s employers determined what and when she ate, and where and for how long she slept, all while her labour was being observed (or at least was potentially being observed). In the same way that prison life is structured by time (Sparks et al., 1996), and as control is exercised through ‘time-discipline’ (Foucault, 1979), Merilyn’s home/work life was too. Merilyn’s employer not only managed all the hours she worked (and even her sleeping time on some occasions), but they also controlled the time on her days ‘off’, dictating when she could return and attempting to govern where she went: “they always tell me not to go some places, only church, send money, see friends in place close-by.” This was not unusual. Benilda, another shelter resident, said that her employer not only imposed curfews but also explicitly banned her from certain areas of the city-state (shopping centres, bars, and a district they deemed unacceptable for her to visit). Meanwhile, her employer’s 30-year-old son attempted to control her clothing. She explained: Because I really like to wear string vests and shorts but he don’t like … I always bring [a change of clothes] in my bag … I change in Lucky Plaza … then when I come back, I wear short and string vests … that’s why he’s angry. That’s why on Monday its ‘blah blah blah’ … ‘the vests not nice to [on] you, the shorts not nice to [on] you’ … he says like that. But because it happens longer and longer I become stubborn and just wear dress and skirt, then he, he have always a problem … . (interview with Benilda, 2017)
Comments ranging from Richelle’s concern about her employers being ‘more difficult’ if she were to miss her curfew; to Meri’s complaint of the bodily pain that resulted from her shrinking an item of her employer’s clothing; and to Benilda’s assertion that her physical assault was due to her employer’s son’s disapproval of her clothing (on a day she was not even being paid to work in their home), exposed just some of the ways in which punishment became central to domestic worker’s everyday labour experiences. Of course, beyond the more routinised and mundane ways in which punishment was utilised by employers (confiscating mobile phones, removing day-off privileges), and without wanting to minimize the significance of these actions, conducting ethnography in the HOME shelter meant that I also heard cases of horrifying sexual, physical, and verbal violence. These various punitive actions uncovered the ways in which employers’ homes were rendered geographies of punishment and containment. Moreover, it is clear that within these sites of effective imprisonment, particular forms of domesticity were (re)produced, as domestic workers are viewed as transient bodies to be extracted from, and unable to build home or domesticity in their own terms.
Shelters
Rosamie was one of the two residents that I saw enter the shelter twice. The first time I met her, I learned that she had moved to Singapore on a tourist visa, escaping an abusive relationship with the hope of gaining employment in an administrative role. After several weeks searching for a job with no success, but determined not to return to the Philippines, Rosamie sought the support of an employment agency. After only a few days, she was employed as a domestic worker by a wealthy Filipino family. Unfortunately, however, after months of verbal abuse and exhausting working conditions, her female employer physically assaulted her. Shortly after this event, Rosamie found support and refuge in the HOME shelter.
Following a turbulent few months, Rosamie was granted permission to find a new employer while the police continued to investigate the ‘case’ against her first employer. This new period of employment did not last long, however, and she re-entered the shelter only three months later, unable to cope with working in a household where she did not get on with her employer. As Rosamie explained it to me, her second employer had also sensed that their working relationship was not tenable so had allowed her to leave in a straightforward manner. Despite Rosamie’s desire to leave the country by this point, she was required to remain in Singapore, living in the shelter while the police continued their investigation into her initial abuse claim. Two months later, and nine months after she first reported this incident, Rosamie felt desperate as she was unable to earn an income in the shelter and, therefore, was unable to remit money to her son. In an interview, she explained that she felt both trapped and helpless: Rosamie: We [herself and the rest of the shelter’s residents] need to go out, to get out of this situation, because Singapore’s became like our prison. We are like a prisoner. Author: You feel trapped? Rosamie: Yes, we cannot work, we cannot go home … We feel more, umm … unfortunate. Because we are just like, we survive in our everyday lives because of the donation and everything, when if you are in your home countries, like, you can survive because you are working, or you have your own … So, it’s very hard for me, and not only for me, for us, for all of us [in the shelter] … the reason why they came to Singapore is to work. It’s to provide for the financial situation of their family. And now they’re stuck here. Author: Yeah, and so do you feel somehow stuck in the shelter? Rosamie: Yes, and not only in the shelter, even if I’m staying outside, I can still feel that I’m trapped. Because in Singapore, it’s like a big prison for us. It’s like we’re a prisoner of one big prison. (interview with Rosamie, November 2017) In the Philippines, if you are apprehended for some, whatever case, you are going to be put directly into jail. And the jail is so a scary place. Here at least [in the shelter], the government give you the chances to live a decent life, to stay in a decent place, more decent than the prison. And it’s because they don’t want the responsibility. Of course, if they were going to put us into their own prison, their own jail, then they are going to spend money. (interview with Rosamie, 2017)
While Rosamie never felt particularly comfortable at the shelter, viewing it as a place where she was being detained but, at least, free from concern of physical abuse, many of the other residents felt differently. Several residents told me that the shelter was more comfortable than many of the other places that they had lived, with many more referring to it endearingly as a place of belonging, homeliness, and security. When comparing the HOME shelter to another one that she had stayed in, another resident, Khin Aye, a 29-year-old woman from Myanmar explained: First time … when I see they [the other residents] can wear any clothes … that’s the first thing that I saw, it’s like for me, really your free … then also … I saw so many plugs … You know it means, free to charge the phone … It means they don’t control you … And then also the staff … they say “don’t call me ma’am, call me sister”. That thing also made me really like, wow … Even in meeting, they are not sat on a chair if we are on the floor … So, it’s like, that’s how they show us, I am same as you. (Interview with Khin Aye, 2017)
Like Tazzioli and Garelli's (2020) discussion of Lesbos being transformed into a space of containment but with various circuits of mobility running through it, these shelters contain their residents while acting as nodes where regimes of forced (im)mobility are embedded. They also constitiute carceral space, as the state controls, oversees, and continues to organise migrant bodies from these sites. Indeed, while the residents of the HOME shelter were not ever locked into the building (unlike some other shelters I heard of), on weekdays they were unable to come and go entirely freely and curfews were imposed on all days. As such, and like employers’ homes, the state relied on shelters as carceral infrastructure, as geographies which allowed their labour migration regime, and therefore their economy, to function.
Conclusion
In this article, I have exemplified just some of the ways in which Singapore’s labour-migration regime is, firstly, underpinned by a carceral logic which regulates bodies through gendered disciplinary apparatuses and, secondly, maintained by utilising domestic space as geographies of confinement, sureveillance, and punishment. While exploiting employers’ homes and shelters as carceral infrastrucure, the state plays an active role in shaping these ‘private’ spaces socially and materially. Indeed, state policy and legislation, like employment agencies’ practices (Antona, 2023), play a role in producing particular forms of domesticity that confine, punish, and prevent domestic workers from making home on their own terms. While geographic scholarship has long acknowledged that homes can be sites of labour, incarceration, and violence (Blunt and Dowling, 2006; Brickell, 2012; Gill et al., 2018; Hammond, 2004; hooks, 1990; Meth, 2003; Stoller, 2003), there has been less academic focus on the ways in which punishment and carcerality intersect with different geographies of labour (Cassidy et al., 2020). This article begins (at least in a small way) to address this void and to demonstrate the ways in which employers’ homes, as spaces of work (waged, non-waged, productive, and reproductive), become sites of punishment for migrant domestic workers, where their labour, rest time, and bodies become subjected to heightened surveillance and scrutiny.
It is important to note that the feelings of unfreedom and entrapment that many migrant workers described during the core period of my fieldwork in 2017 were only worsened with the onset of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Despite being lauded initially for its response to the pandemic, in April 2020 Singapore made international headlines as the conditions within the dormitories inhabited by migrant workers were subjected to international scrutiny. Confined to hot, unsanitary, and crowded rooms for extended periods, the residents of these dormitories described them as prison-like. Similarly, several domestic workers that I spoke to about their experiences of the ‘circuit-breaker’ (or lockdown) measures, commented on the increased bodily surveillance and restrictions that they were subjected to. Significantly, however, many domestic workers also attested to very little having changed for them, as they were working in households where they were already intensely monitored and given very limited, if any, time outside of their employers’ homes (Antona, 2022). The widespread confinement of populations to domestic spaces during this period raised international concern about the broader mental and physical health/wellbeing ramifications of the pandemic, yet this was the norm for many migrant domestic workers in Singapore (and beyond). This not only exemplifies the ways in which domestic workers’ lives are heavily confined ordinarily, and the carceral conditions embedded within Singapore’s labour-migration regime, but it also reveals both the disregard and invisibilisation of migrant domestic workers’ everyday living and working experiences. While the pandemic produced new forms of domesticity for many of us, homes were already geographies of labour, confinement, and social control for many migrant domestic workers. As an activist stated in a conversation early in 2023, long after the COVID-19 restrictions had eased in Singapore, “you would have thought that people would now empathise with domestic workers more, they know a bit what it’s like to be stuck inside, but no, now everything has been forgotten again”. Whether or not this is a collective amnesia, or a widespread devaluing of certain lives, domestic workers continue to report a return to life as it was before the pandemic.
It is also important to acknowledge that while NGOs, activists, and scholars continue to urge the Singaporean government to make positive changes to migrant workers’ living and working conditions, this would be unlikely to fundamentally transform the labour-migration regime. Despite providing refuge, care, and support, the HOME shelter has itself become a geography of confinemnet and punishment for many. Indeed, like other activists, NGOs, and migrant rights organisations, staff and volunteers at HOME continue to advocate for better living and working conditions while necessarily operating within the legislative and policy framework provided by the state. Without diminishing the importance of policy and legisaltive reforms (which do make day-to-day life better for migrant workers in Singapore in significant ways), they do not fundamentally challenge the carceral underpinnings of this regime and the exploitation and unfreedom it (re)produces (Yea and Chok, 2018). Having identified the ways in which carceral domesticities are produced, it is clear that more consideration needs to be given to how a system which confines, punishes, and then disposes of racialised and gendered migrant bodies can be unravelled and profoundly transformed. As such, I would suggest that further engagement with the writing and practices of abolitionists is needed, as this movment seeks a complete end to systemic violence (Gilmore, 2002) and an alternative, emancipatory future.
Footnotes
Declaration of conflicting interests
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financialsupport for the research, authorship, and/or publicationof this article: Economic and Social Research Council. Grant Numbers: ES/J500070/1, ES/V011553/1.
