ABSTRACT
The paper explores London-based third sector practitioners’ engagement with vulnerability in their work with refugee and migrant women during pregnancy and in the post-natal period. Practitioners draw on notions of vulnerability that signal weakness and passivity as a strategy, which enables them to secure resources for the women they support as well as to sustain their own organisational existence in a third sector landscape that has been transformed by a range of neoliberal measures. Despite this invoking of essentialised vulnerability practitioners possess an awareness of how the broader context of women’s lives, including government policies and structural disadvantage, acts to shape their vulnerability. The paper argues practitioners’ contextual understanding of refuge and migrant women’s vulnerability resonates with theoretical approaches that conceptualise vulnerability as an ontological characteristic of human existence. Strategic use of essentialised vulnerability is central to accessing resources, while an ontological understanding of vulnerability as a universal potential activated by socially mediated unequal power relations enables practitioners to address the specific factors that are producing women’s vulnerability to harm. Crucially, this includes challenging the effects of the UK government’s anti-immigrant ‘hostile environment’ policy and neoliberal austerity measures.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes
1 These effects were felt even by well-established medium sized TSOs. The closure of Eaves, a London-based charity supporting women who have experienced violence, in 2015 reverberated particularly strongly throughout the women’s sector.
2 There are some funders who acknowledge how structural oppression and social policy contribute to vulnerability. For example, Mind and Agenda’s Women Side by Side programme funds women-led mental health initiatives that recognise how ‘multiple disadvantage,’ including gendered experiences of violence, contribute to poor mental health, and the Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust has a strong focus on supporting work that tackles structures and systems that deny refugees and migrants their rights. It is too early to tell whether this trend will prevail in grant making.