Negotiating male gatekeeper violence in team-based research on Bangladeshi migrant women in Malaysia |
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Authors: | Shanthi Thambiah Kabita Chakraborty Rayhena Sarker |
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Affiliation: | 1. Gender Studies Programme, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia;2. Children’s Studies Program, Department of Humanities, York University, Toronto, Canada;3. Institute of Asian Studies, University Brunei Darussalam, Brunei Darussalam |
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Abstract: | While the field of migration studies is expanding to understand the nuanced experiences of women across Asia, there has been little discussion of how these studies were conducted. This article draws on the reflective accounts of three researchers on a team project investigating the lived experiences of female Bangladeshi migrant workers in Malaysia. While the research aims centred on understanding the lives of the Bangladeshi migrant women, the team spent a significant amount of time negotiating male gatekeeper violence in the field. The article further describes the researchers’ experiences of sexual harassment and intimidation, and explores these through the complex locations of the migrant workers and the female researchers in the field site. In addition, the article deals with the way in which the team’s feminist research sensibilities were challenged in the context of negotiating that violence. The ethical dilemma of continuing the research in the face of persistent violence was dealt with by discussing approaches employed in managing the violence. Analysing male gatekeeper violence in the field, allowed for conversations around the intersection of migration and masculinities. This auto-ethnography reveals methodological concerns for female researchers and exposes the negotiated nature of the front line of migration research. |
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Keywords: | Bangladeshi female migrant workers male gatekeeper violence team research auto-ethnography strategies to manage violence |
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