From "Canadians First" to "Workers Unite": Evolving Union Narratives of Migrant Workers
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Foster, Jason (Author)
Title
From "Canadians First" to "Workers Unite": Evolving Union Narratives of Migrant Workers
Abstract
The rapid influx of temporary foreign workers (TFWs) into Canada in the early 2000s posed significant challenges to Canadian unions. Using narrative analysis, this paper examines how union leaders constructed narratives about TFWs in the period 2006 to 2012. It finds three temporally sequential narrative arcs: prioritizing of Canadian workers' interests and portrayal of TFWs as employer pawns; TFWs as vulnerable workers needing union advocacy for their employment and human rights; and post-economic crisis conflicted efforts to integrate Canadian and TFW interests. The narrative arcs are shaped by tensions between internal pressures on union leaders and their external contexts. The analysis reveals that union leaders' responsibility to represent members can clash with their broader values of social justice and equality. By linking the contemporary reaction to TFWs to labour's historical approach to immigration and race, the paper also reveals important continuities and interruptions in labour's relationship with migrants.
Publication
Relations Industrielles
Volume
69
Issue
2
Pages
241-265
Date
Spring 2014
Language
English
ISSN
0034379X
Short Title
From "Canadians First" to "Workers Unite"
Accessed
3/25/15, 4:37 PM
Rights
Copyright Universite Laval - Departement des Relations Industrielles Spring 2014
Citation
Foster, J. (2014). From “Canadians First” to “Workers Unite”: Evolving Union Narratives of Migrant Workers. Relations Industrielles, 69(2), 241–265. http://www.erudit.org/revue/ri/2014/v69/n2/index.html
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