Living at Work and Intra-worker Sociality Among Migrant Farm Workers in Canada

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Living at Work and Intra-worker Sociality Among Migrant Farm Workers in Canada
Abstract
This article examines how the dormitory labour system as it is employed in the agricultural streams of Canada's Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP) affects workers' everyday sociality. In the article, I demonstrate how the physical compression of home and work into a singular geographic site shapes workers' identities and everyday relationships. Drawing on findings gathered from interviews with migrant farm workers from Mexico and Guatemala working in Southern Ontario, I explore how the requirement to warehouse temporary foreign workers directly on employer property collides with workers' ability to establish an autonomous and dignified life in Canada. In particular, I demonstrate how the TFWP agricultural dormitory system produces inter-generational dynamics that intensify worker self-discipline and generates gender dynamics that support the development of a hyper-productive transnational workforce.
Publication
Journal of International Migration and Integration
Volume
19
Issue
4
Pages
1021-1036
Date
2018
Journal Abbr
J. Int. Migr. Integr.
Language
English
ISSN
1488-3473
Library Catalog
Web of Science
Extra
WOS:000446401800010
Citation
Perry, J. A. (2018). Living at Work and Intra-worker Sociality Among Migrant Farm Workers in Canada. Journal of International Migration and Integration, 19(4), 1021–1036. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12134-018-0583-z