Investigating the conditions of vulnerability experienced by migrant workers during the COVID‐19 pandemic in Kerala, India

Author:

McGowran Peter12ORCID,Mathews Mishal A.3,Johns Hannah1,Harasym Mary C.3,Raju Emmanuel456,Ayeb‐Karlsson Sonja78

Affiliation:

1. PhD is Senior Research Associate United Nations University Institute for Environment and Human Security Germany

2. Lecturer in Development Geography, School of Law and Social Sciences Oxford Brookes University United Kingdom

3. Research Assistant United Nations University Institute for Environment and Human Security Germany

4. Associate Professor, Global Health Section University of Copenhagen Denmark

5. Director Copenhagen Center for Disaster Research Denmark

6. Visiting Associate Professor, African Centre for Disaster Studies North‐West University South Africa

7. PhD is Associate Professor, Institute for Risk and Disaster Reduction University College London United Kingdom

8. Senior Researcher United Nations University Institute for Environment and Human Security United Kingdom

Abstract

This paper analyses findings of the ‘PROWELLMIGRANTS’2 project, which qualitatively investigated COVID‐19 impacts on migrants’ well‐being and mental health in Kerala, India. It draws on a novel conceptual framework that combines assemblage‐thinking with theories of social contracts in disasters. The paper first explores how past development processes and contemporary migration policies in Kerala, and India more widely, generated conditions of vulnerability for migrant workers in Kerala prior to the pandemic. Next it shows that Government of Kerala interventions, in some cases supported by the central Government of India, temporarily addressed these vulnerabilities during the pandemic. In acknowledging the helpful response of the Kerala government, we problematise its stance on migrant workers during ‘normal’ times and speculate that permanently addressing these conditions of vulnerability would be a more logical approach. We acknowledge this involves overcoming many wider barriers. Thus, the paper also contains national‐level policy implications.

Funder

California Department of Fish and Game

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Social Sciences

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