SDG 8: Decent Work and Economic Growth
SDG 10: Reduced Inequalities
Judith Torres has been a domestic worker in Colombia since she was 13. In the past, she was often paid unfairly – given used clothes or food instead of wages. After discovering the Aliadas app, designed by and for domestic workers, Judith learned about her labor rights and how to negotiate effectively. The app, she says, serves as “the perfect key for domestic workers,” enabling access to information that is helping her improve her own life and support her colleagues.
Since 2019, CARE and its partners have been working to empower domestic workers in Latin America through mobile applications and increased digital literacy. The project, entitled “Strengthening the Domestic Workers’ Movement Through Technology and Learning” and supported by the Cummins Foundation, is part of CARE Latin America’s Equal Value, Equal Rights program, which seeks to improve the working conditions of domestic workers by strengthening their knowledge and skills to advocate for and lead action around labor rights. The project builds on the success of Brazil’s Laudelina app, which was a finalist in the 2016 Google Social Impact Challenge and was developed by Themis and the National Federation of Domestic Workers.
Domestic workers in Latin America face frequent mistreatment and discrimination. Because they often work in isolation, many lack access to information about their rights or support networks to claim those rights. Mobile apps put this knowledge at their fingertips and connect them to unions and advocacy organizations, enabling stronger support networks. Features such as wage and benefit calculators are helping workers and their employers understand fair treatment and pay.
For this project, CARE is partnering with local women’s and domestic workers’ rights groups in Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, and Peru – collectively home to nearly 10 million domestic workers, the vast majority of whom are indigenous, black and Afro-descendant women with precarious working conditions. The project focuses on four apps, each available for free and with information relevant to that country’s domestic workforce: Laudelina app (Brazil), Aliadas app (Colombia), Dignas app (Mexico), and Valora app (Peru).