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Everyday Realities of Home-based Work
in Madrid
Matadero, Centre for
Contemporary Creation
Madrid, Spain
2011
All homes are
working environments. While they have become increasingly considered places of
consumption, containing the objects we purchase and serving as settings to
spend hours watching TV, they are also crucial spaces for production and
reproduction in the city. Today, the productive paid activities that take place
in the home are linked to increasingly decentralised modes of production and
the technologies that enable them.
In addition, for many social groups, the home plays a
key role as a production centre in the development of entrepreneurial projects,
or simply in helping people to balance household reproductive and paid,
work-related tasks. However, urban planning has largely ignored the problems
that arise from these realities – as well as the potential they offer. While
home-based work has historically been overlooked when considering care and
reproductive realities in the home, it is important to recognise that, at
present, there are many other areas where home-based work is also neglected.
In Husos we
initiated a research project in 2009 to analyse an array of labour situations
within the home environment, in order to understand how changes in housing
design can promote social welfare and empowerment by better accommodating
home-based productive and reproductive practices. (For a more detailed account
of this research, see Barajas and García in Volume
Magazine no 32: Centers Adrift, 2012).
In this phase
of the project, which focuses on fieldwork in Madrid, we used questionnaires to
engage with forty-eight individuals who work from or in the home. In-depth
interviews and extended fieldwork were carried out on ten of these individuals.
This led to an analysis of two fundamental aspects of the everyday realities of
home-based work. The first concern pertains to social capital, specifically how
these realities can empower certain individuals and serve as a tool for
economic emancipation and the nurturing of entrepreneurial endeavours.
Moreover, they facilitate the development of new types of relationships, such
as the integration of productive and reproductive aspects of life, as well as a
closer connection to a person’s immediate surroundings.
In contrast,
the second aspect is related to certain issues of the opposite nature: the
tendency towards round-the-clock working schedules and their frequent
relationship to various forms of isolation, labour exploitation and
precariousness, whether these occur inside or outside of legality.
The cases
studied in this analysis present arguments that show how this particular aspect
of precariousness does not necessarily undermine the importance of the values
found in domestic (re)productive everyday life and in the current dispersion of
work in general. Instead, they emphasise the importance of developing new
frameworks to view housing as a potential space for sharing care, affect and
imagination. Such frameworks should be physical (new types of residential
buildings, for example), organisational (political-normative, community
management and labour laws), and symbolic (providing visibility when needed).
Furthermore, they should allow for the collaborative creation of both tangible
and intangible goods that are connected to increased participation and
democratisation in the production and reproduction of our societies.
(1)
A trailer of the interviews
can be viewed at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qVzn7dOdU7U&ab_channel=plataformahusos
(2)
The case studies of home-based
workers in Madrid are part of an ongoing research project by Plataforma Husos
called ' (Re)productive Housing', the most recent phases of which were
supported by The Universidad Europea de Madrid between 2007 and 2010, El
Ranchito-Centro de Creación Contemporánea Matadero in 2011-2012 and the Oslo
Architecture Triennale in 2016.