This ethnography is an indisputable contribution to both Asian studies and anthropology and a pioneering work in the field of transnational migration studies. I strongly recommend this lively and readable study of the complex lives of domestic workers in Hong Kong as a textbook for use in a variety of classes.
(American Ethnologist) An ethnography with a twist, in that it portrays the domestic workers in their own terms, speaking for themselves through their experiences and reactions, including the strategies of resistance developed by the workers.
(China Journal) Constable undertakes extensive naturalistic and participant observation.... The interviews are lively, presenting an array of experiences.
(China Quarterly) Maid to Order in Hong Kong is a stimulating and compellingly written book.
(American Anthropologist) The combination of analyses of the social structural forms of domination and the individual forms of resistance makes Constable's work insightful and useful.
(Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society) This book contains rich qualitative data and provides sophisticated analysis of the plights, resistance, and accommodation of domestic workers. The writing is highly engaging. I strongly recommend it to students of qualitative methodology, gender and migration studies, as well as to all those who are interested in agency and contestations of women, and who care about the struggles of the disadvantaged.
- Catherine C. H. Chiu (Work and Occupations)