Precarious motherhood Maternal health/care and the state in Los Angeles, USA

Open Access
Authors
Supervisors
Cosupervisors
Award date 24-09-2025
ISBN
  • 9789036108102
Number of pages 206
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR)
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG)
Abstract
This doctoral thesis explores the impact of State-induced precarity on the maternal health and mother work of Central American asylum-seeking women living in Los Angeles, U.S. Using ethnographic data collected from 2019-2021, I trace how multiple forms of precarity increase in the lives of Central American asylum-seeking women as they navigate healthcare and social service access while caring for their children. Likewise, I explore service providers’ understanding of and responses to women’s precarity– specifically Home Visitation staff and Community-Based Doulas. Through this research, I demonstrate how precarity is induced in the lives of racialized, marginalized asylum-seekers in the U.S. through various methods of structural violence such as legal violence, infrastructural violence and reproductive governance. Additionally, I discuss how structural racism further perpetuates precarity for racialized, marginalized women through the white medical gaze and State surveillance of their parenting practices. Together, I argue that these forms of precaritization are mechanisms of reproductive violence that must be attended to in order to ensure the advancement of reproductive justice in the United States.
Document type PhD thesis
Language English
Downloads
Thesis (complete) (Embargo up to 2027-09-24)
Chapter 4: Home visitation programs, risk, and precarious motherhood in Los Angeles (Embargo up to 2027-09-24)
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