Resumen
This paper addresses a relational conceptualization of social exclusion and social inclusion, and their association with essential undocumented workers in jobs that have high levels of risk during and after the pandemic – agriculture production, meat packing processing, and nursing homes. COVID-19 has exposed the systemic undervaluing of work that is now clearly understood to be essential for societal survival. These industries are identified as part of the critical infrastructure workforce necessary to protect communities, and to ensure the continuity of functions critical to public health and safety, as well as economic and national security globally (DHS, 2020). Discussion includes narratives about these industries, their lack of necessary protection for immigrant workers, and the implications for social work practice and development. This paper is a call to action for social workers to construct social inclusion strategies working collaboratively with government, public and private sectors to promote respect, dignity, and the human rights of essential workers. Immigration policy solutions occur when there is a global public will to respect diversity through social inclusion processes and actions. Case illustrations demonstrate social inclusion strategies that allow undocumented essential workers to part of the social fabric. Governments need to redress financial relief, and a legal status for essential workers. Employers need to promote better working conditions, a steady labor force, a consistent living wage, and workmen’s compensation such as sick days, access, and availability to healthcare. These social inclusion measures can be done through a government, employer, employee partnerships to promote equitable economic and health justice. This paper is a call to action to reconstruct U.S. immigration policies and allow undocumented essential workers to come out of the shadows and become visible as part of the social fabric. Social workers must continue to advocate for a legal status, a pathway to citizenship, for essential workers.
Palabras Clave (separar con comas)
Social exclusion, social inclusion, essential undocumented workers, COVID 19, collaboration, government, public and private sectors.