Trajectories of Union Renewal:

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Trajectories of Union Renewal:
Abstract
Western Canada’s oil-exporting economies have come to rely on migrant labour as a cornerstone of economic development. A global division of labour intersecting with the constellation of Canada’s migrant worker programs has shaped the contemporary political-economic character of many Canadian provinces, including Saskatchewan. These programs have worked to construct bifurcated labour markets for growing low-wage industries that exist alongside high-wage resource-sector employment. Although a majority of these migrant workers end up employed in non-unionized workplaces, foreign workers who secure occupations in health care, construction, warehousing, and manufacturing are often represented by a union. The study explores union attitudes and union-member engagement among migrant labour through the lens of union revitalization, in an attempt to confront claims that migrant workers are without an affinity to organized labour and avoid participating in union business and the collective-bargaining process.
Publication
Labour / Le Travail
Volume
85
Pages
235-259
Date
Spring 2020
Language
en
ISSN
1911-4842
Short Title
Trajectories of Union Renewal
Accessed
8/18/20, 3:58 AM
Library Catalog
Citation
Stevens, A. (2020). Trajectories of Union Renewal: Labour / Le Travail, 85, 235–259. https://doi.org/10.1353/llt.2020.0008