Abstract
This article addresses precarity, denigration and activism of women and sexual dissidents in the fast-food sector in Chile. Grounded in a Latin American feminist ontology of precarity that foregrounds subjective experience, this study employs a thematic analysis of 25 interviews with fast-food workers across multiple cities in Chile. The analysis inductively and systematically identified patterns of meaning, with findings organised into three themes: (a) accentuated job precarity; (b) women and dissidents at the forefront – shedding light on demands and struggles; and (c) denigration as the invisible trenches of activism. The article contributes to understanding women’s and dissidents’ precarity as a situated phenomenon in the Global South and to social psychology by showing how women fast-food workers enact collective action against the inequalities and injustices faced by subaltern groups in contemporary labour markets.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
