"It's a thin line" health, illness and well-being among Indonesian factory workers
thesis
posted on 2017-02-08, 06:04authored byNugrahani, Riana Dewi
This thesis presents the complexities of factory workers' problems in an export
processing zone in Makassar, South Sulawesi, Indonesia, in managing their
health, illness and well-being. A combination of quantitative and qualitative
approaches was used to collect the data. Single and young men and women, of
whom the majority worked in food and wood factories, were recruited to
participate in this study. The search for good fortune, rural poverty, the desire to
have material goods, and to escape from the social constraints of village life,
drives people to move to the city. Despite a predominant desire to pursue
economic gain, workers also relate urban living as providing them with a modern
lifestyle, which they translate as having freedom and independence, providing
them with a space to make their own decisions especially in relation to spending
money. But this freedom seems to be illusive, as privileges are not stated in work
agreements. Insecurity and having no choice in the workplace, poor working
conditions, strained relationships with supervisor, long hours of work, and fear of
losing jobs, obscure and dilute the freedom that workers hope to have in their
personal lives. These factors also lead to deteriorations in workers' health
conditions. Their health is exacerbated by stressful living conditions, such as a
dirty and insanitary environment, crowded housing, and lack of water supply,
and the complicated nature of social and personal relationships, such as family
problems, low remuneration for their work, and pressure on them to remit to their
families.
Instead of being passive victims of the stressful working environment and
social structure, most informants showed positive attitudes and strong individual
agency as can be seen through their various coping strategies, which involved
seeking treatment, professionally and traditionally, being grateful, self-blaming
(and so a sense of personal responsibility), spiritual practices, and their
involvement in labour unions. Drawing on this data, I argue that interventions are
needed which are not limited only to health and treatment facilities, but expanded
to improve the policies of employers, industrial relations, and the quality of
government's policies, all of which influence workers' daily lives, both in
workplace and living environment.