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Invaluable and outsourced: experiences of private company cleaners working in the public hospital sector in Cape Town

In the hospital context, and in research on hospitals, cleaning staff often find themselves on the periphery. This peripheral status is exacerbated when cleaners are employed by private cleaning companies. The intersection of locations these cleaners find themselves in, as cleaners, outsourced suppo...

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Main Author: Petro, Lyndsey
Other Authors: Grossman, Jonathan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Sociology 2014
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access_status_str Open Access
author Petro, Lyndsey
author2 Grossman, Jonathan
author_browse Grossman, Jonathan
Petro, Lyndsey
author_facet Grossman, Jonathan
Petro, Lyndsey
author_sort Petro, Lyndsey
collection Thesis
description In the hospital context, and in research on hospitals, cleaning staff often find themselves on the periphery. This peripheral status is exacerbated when cleaners are employed by private cleaning companies. The intersection of locations these cleaners find themselves in, as cleaners, outsourced support staff and members of the working poor means that their work-life experiences take a particular shape. In an attempt to better understand the work experiences of these staff members, I conducted qualitative interviews with 8 female private company cleaners from four different public hospitals in Cape Town. Alienation, job insecurity, working poverty and emotional labour are used as tools to unpack and understand these experiences. Here I argue that these workers perform work that is far from ancillary or non-essential, work central to the functioning of the hospital space. However, the scope of their work is unappreciated and as a result, so too are the health and safety risks they are exposed to, making them especially vulnerable. This vulnerability is compounded by insecurity and the struggle to make ends meet. Alienating conditions are evident as they are constantly reminded of their status at the bottom of the hospital hierarchy and made to feel insignificant. Engaging with the experiences of these cleaners shows how alienation, insecurity, working poverty and emotional labour manifest in interesting ways. It allows us to see the numerous challenges they face in their working lives, particularly as private company cleaners in a hospital.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2014
publishDateRange 2014
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publisherStr Department of Sociology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/6829 Invaluable and outsourced: experiences of private company cleaners working in the public hospital sector in Cape Town Petro, Lyndsey Grossman, Jonathan In the hospital context, and in research on hospitals, cleaning staff often find themselves on the periphery. This peripheral status is exacerbated when cleaners are employed by private cleaning companies. The intersection of locations these cleaners find themselves in, as cleaners, outsourced support staff and members of the working poor means that their work-life experiences take a particular shape. In an attempt to better understand the work experiences of these staff members, I conducted qualitative interviews with 8 female private company cleaners from four different public hospitals in Cape Town. Alienation, job insecurity, working poverty and emotional labour are used as tools to unpack and understand these experiences. Here I argue that these workers perform work that is far from ancillary or non-essential, work central to the functioning of the hospital space. However, the scope of their work is unappreciated and as a result, so too are the health and safety risks they are exposed to, making them especially vulnerable. This vulnerability is compounded by insecurity and the struggle to make ends meet. Alienating conditions are evident as they are constantly reminded of their status at the bottom of the hospital hierarchy and made to feel insignificant. Engaging with the experiences of these cleaners shows how alienation, insecurity, working poverty and emotional labour manifest in interesting ways. It allows us to see the numerous challenges they face in their working lives, particularly as private company cleaners in a hospital. 2014-09-02T09:53:04Z 2014-09-02T09:53:04Z 2014 Master Thesis Masters MSocSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6829 eng application/pdf Department of Sociology Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Petro, Lyndsey
Invaluable and outsourced: experiences of private company cleaners working in the public hospital sector in Cape Town
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Invaluable and outsourced: experiences of private company cleaners working in the public hospital sector in Cape Town
title_full Invaluable and outsourced: experiences of private company cleaners working in the public hospital sector in Cape Town
title_fullStr Invaluable and outsourced: experiences of private company cleaners working in the public hospital sector in Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed Invaluable and outsourced: experiences of private company cleaners working in the public hospital sector in Cape Town
title_short Invaluable and outsourced: experiences of private company cleaners working in the public hospital sector in Cape Town
title_sort invaluable and outsourced experiences of private company cleaners working in the public hospital sector in cape town
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6829
work_keys_str_mv AT petrolyndsey invaluableandoutsourcedexperiencesofprivatecompanycleanersworkinginthepublichospitalsectorincapetown