TY - CHAP AB - Abstract In this chapter, we examine the multifaceted challenges that feminist labor organizations face in decommodifying the lives and labor of poor and working-class women. Using an in-depth case study of domestic worker organizing in South Korea, we find that non-governmental organizations (NGOs) such as the National House Managers Cooperative and the Korean Women Workers Association became entangled in hegemonic state projects that linked support for women’s basic livelihoods to the proliferation of part-time, informal domestic work in the context of widespread crises. To challenge the discriminatory and market-driven logics of state-driven social protection efforts, these NGOs have advanced an emancipatory agenda to improve the working conditions, labor rights, and social dignity of domestic workers through consciousness-raising grassroots organizing methods and contentious policy advocacy campaigns. Their social movement transformation goals, however, have been constrained by the relative organizational isolation and limited organizational capacity of feminist labor NGOs in a broader context of neoliberal precaritization and gender-stratified labor markets. The myriad dilemmas facing domestic worker organizing in an era of global hegemonic market rule highlight the need to develop new political imaginaries to contest gender and economic injustice. VL - 35 SN - 978-1-78769-368-5, 978-1-78769-367-8/0198-8719 DO - 10.1108/S0198-871920180000035006 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/S0198-871920180000035006 AU - Chun Jennifer Jihye AU - Kim Yang-Sook PY - 2018 Y1 - 2018/01/01 TI - Feminist Entanglements with the Neoliberal Welfare State: NGOS and Domestic Worker Organizing in South Korea T2 - Gendering Struggles against Informal and Precarious Work T3 - Political Power and Social Theory PB - Emerald Publishing Limited SP - 147 EP - 168 Y2 - 2024/04/20 ER -