precarious employment

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How Does Food Insecurity Among African Migrants in South Africa Compare to Host Population Vulnerabilities?

Food Insecurity Among African Migrants vs. Host Communities in South Africa Opening: Hunger in the City — Migrants and Host Communities In 2023, a striking statistic emerged: approximately 63.5 % of South African households — over 12 million households — were classified as food insecure. Institute of Development Studies+2South African Human Rights Commission+2This number reflects a […]

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migrant workers South Africa, trade unions South Africa, informal economy, labor rights protection, xenophobia South Africa, migrant health outcomes, undocumented workers, labor migration policy, workplace exploitation, occupational health hazards, COSATU, National Labour Migration Policy, Operation Dudula, Zimbabwean Exemption Permit, Lesotho Exemption Permit, Department of Employment and Labour, Department of Home Affairs, SADC Labour Migration Action Plan, xenophobic violence, migrant worker protection, migration health, public health South Africa, occupational health, TB and HIV prevention, mental health migrants, healthcare access barriers, trauma-informed care, health equity, social determinants of health, heat-health vulnerabilities, labor inspection, employment rights, social protection, collective bargaining, fair recruitment, labor law enforcement, documentation status, regularization programs, bilateral labor agreements, international labor standards, Johannesburg migrants, Cape Town informal traders, Durban xenophobia, Gauteng province, Soweto, Hillbrow, Beitbridge border post, SADC region, Southern African migration, domestic workers, construction workers, street vendors, agricultural workers, informal traders, self-employed migrants, hospitality workers, mining sector, precarious employment, Migrant Workers Union, SACCAWU, NUMSA, SADSAWU, Simunye Workers Forum, vulnerable workers organizing, informal sector unions, community-based organizing, union membership barriers, undocumented migrants, asylum seekers, refugee workers, gender-based discrimination, youth unemployment, intersectional vulnerabilities, economic precarity, social isolation, legal vulnerability, ILO conventions, SADC protocols, African Union migration policy, Sustainable Development Goals, Global Compact for Migration, ICRMW, regional integration, free movement protocols, cross-border labor mobility, labor advocacy, rapid response teams, mobile health clinics, legal aid services, anti-xenophobia training, migrant health units, collective agreements, worker empowerment, solidarity building, community health workers, migration statistics, labor market data, health surveillance, participatory action research, longitudinal studies, data disaggregation, evidence-based policy, research gaps, migration health research, epidemiological data, remittances, social grants, wage exploitation, equal pay, minimum wage violations, informal trading fees, economic contributions, unemployment rates, skills shortage, labor market impacts

What is the role of trade unions in protecting the rights of migrant workers in South Africa’s informal economy?

Trade Unions and Migrant Worker Protection in South Africa’s Informal Economy: Challenges and Solutions A Crisis in Plain Sight In January 2024, armed Operation Dudula members descended on the Beitbridge border post. They aimed to physically prevent Zimbabwean migrants from entering South Africa. Meanwhile, in Johannesburg’s townships, Maria (name changed), a 34-year-old Zimbabwean domestic worker,

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