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Migration bans on women migrant domestic workers from Ghana

Unidentified Ghanaian women sit on a buckets in Elmina port

Team Members

Richa Shivakoti

Co-applicants: Mary Setrana 

Research Assistant: Sarah Nyarko

Funders

Canada Excellence Research Chair in Migration and Integration

Description

Migrant domestic workers make crucial contributions to households and economies across the world and yet remain amongst the most vulnerable due to various structural, legal, and entry/exit frameworks. Several labour sending countries from Asia and Africa have introduced different forms of policies banning women migrant domestic workers (MDWs) from migrating overseas for work with the rationale of “protecting” them from harm and abuse. 

This project aims to question the enduring use of this migration ban policy as a form of emigration restriction even though the ban does not meet the policy goal of protecting women migrant workers but rather pushes the process underground resulting in increased vulnerability and rights violations. This project will focus on Ghana’s ban on migrant domestic workers to the Gulf states and explore its consequences for women migrant workers.

  

Methodologies

This project has a qualitative research design. We will review the 2017 ban on women MDWs from Ghana to the Gulf States as well as a comprehensive review of policy documents related to labour migration from Ghana. In addition, we conduct 20 semi-structured interviews with women migrant workers and 5 key informant interviews with policymakers/experts working with women migrants regarding the implementation of the ban, its challenges and impacts.

Project Outcomes

Shivakoti, Richa, Sarah Nyarko and Mary Setrana Boatemaa April, 2026 “Impact and Implications of the Migration Ban policy on women domestic workers in Ghana” at the International Conference on Bridging the Gap? Rethinking Engagement between Migration Research, Policies and Practices (external link) . Centre for Migration Studies, University of Ghana.