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Women in Mining: Challenge underground Asanda Benya SWOP, Sociology Dept. Wits University

Women in Mining: Challenge underground Asanda Benya SWOP, Sociology Dept. Wits University. Methodology. 1.5 years inside the mines Participant observation - I trained and worked: labourer , pikinini , winch - lived with the workers Challenges and coping mechanisms Subjectivities.

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Women in Mining: Challenge underground Asanda Benya SWOP, Sociology Dept. Wits University

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  1. Women in Mining: Challenge undergroundAsanda BenyaSWOP, Sociology Dept. Wits University

  2. Methodology • 1.5 years inside the mines • Participant observation - I trained and worked: labourer, pikinini, winch - lived with the workers • Challenges and coping mechanisms • Subjectivities

  3. Women in Mining (WIM) Background • WIM underground in SA is a new phenomenon • Britain- Mines Act of 1842, ILO 1935 • SA-Mineral Act of 1911 and 1991 • New policies in SA that reverse these prohibitions (1996:H & S, 2002: MPRDA , • 2004: Mining Charter- 10% Women • New legislation targets taken seriously

  4. Mines have drawn up strategies to help integrate women Pregnancy and sexual harassment policies Learnership and mentorship programmes Built separate change rooms on surface Challenges remain

  5. Who are these women • Women in mining VS Women at mining and women for mining • Age 18-40 (reproductive years) • Single mothers • First full time job (contracts) • Unemployment and poverty • Financial security and benefits

  6. What do they do • Attendants (belt, battery, cage) • Store issuers • Assistants (MO, SB) • Equipment helper • Winch operator and miners • No women RDOs • Formal and Informal job allocations

  7. Heat Tolerance Screening • Mandatory for new recruits • Assess heat tolerance • Chamber kept at 28˚c wet bulb and 29.5˚c dry bulb • Climb 24 times in a minute for 30 minutes • Stopping= heat intolerance and inability to do manual work under hot and humid conditions

  8. People can be eliminated before they undergo HTS - weight, illnesses, emotional state - initial body temperature (↓37˚c) Women - Pregnancy and breastfeeding, - menstrual period Completing does not mean pass - 37.6˚c and below is a pass - 37.7˚c and above is a fail - 40˚c is indicative of heat stroke

  9. Introduction • Working underground is a challenge for women • Work is unpredictable underground • Culture of planisa • Women have also come up with their own planisa methods

  10. Challenges • Getting to work • Inside the cage • One piece suits • Start at low ranks • Heat: men v.s women

  11. Challenges • Physically challenging • Relations that exclude women • Removed spatially from stope • Training centre: masculinities • Tacit knowledge not filtering down • Fetch water, and help with easy tasks

  12. challenges • Cultural beliefs and discourse of protection (weak and lazy) • According to men their place is in the kitchen not underground • Unions not taking gender seriously • Sexual harassment • Videos: conditions, H & S

  13. Coping mechanisms • Informal job allocations underground • Carpet promotions: Sexual favours • Exaggerate & emphasize feminine traits- taking care of the family, menstruation, period pains • They planisa- make a plan • Fraudulent HTS stamps • Mtshongolo pills

  14. Use culture and traditions- sotho men and their cultural obligation to assist women. “If you call them Ntate, they’re more likely and willing to help you… The more respect you give the older men, the more they tend to side with you and help you accomplish tasks. Ethnicity and kin ties- setswana and from the same village “men tend to accept you much quicker and are more willing to assist you if you are of the same ethnic group as them”. “She has her Tswana brothers here; she doesn’t need us to help her”

  15. Is Unionization the solution? • Union rivalry (macro) • Gender bias: workplace issues & alliance (national politics) • Wages • Gender solidarity- further victimization • Conspiracy of silence: don’t tell (Rape) • Few women representatives

  16. Unionization • Representation: Shopstewards, - women structures (change house) - organising desks - complaints desk - powerless - legitimacy - strategic silencing of women’s voices

  17. Unionization • Policies: exclusion of women • Pregnancy: alternative employment, financial vulnerabilities • Housing: Obligated to families 1st • Migration (60km radius) • Sexual harassment

  18. Conclusion • There are challenges that women face by virtue of being women: sexual harassment • Unions not the answer for women within • Sexist ideology of domesticity • Collaborated with employers to further exploit women (sexually and socially) • Incorporating women is not the solution • Women continue to be vulnerable and exploited • Unions have failed, what are the alternatives?

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