The Dynamics of Union Responses to Migrant Workers in Canada

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
The Dynamics of Union Responses to Migrant Workers in Canada
Abstract
This study examines how five unions in the Canadian province of Alberta responded to a sudden influx of temporary foreign workers (TFWs), as part of Canadian employers’ increased use of migrant workers in the mid-2000s. The authors find three types of response to the new TFW members: resistive, facilitative and active. Furthermore, these responses were dynamic and changing over time. The different responses are best explained not by the unions’ institutional context, but by internal factors shaping each union’s response. Drawing upon the concept of referential unionisms, the study explores how unions’ self-identity shapes their responses to new challenges such as the influx of migrant workers.
Publication
Work, Employment and Society
Volume
29
Issue
3
Pages
409–426
Date
2015
Language
en
Library Catalog
Google Scholar
Extra
Publisher: SAGE Publications Sage UK: London, England
Citation
Foster, J., Taylor, A., & Khan, C. (2015). The Dynamics of Union Responses to Migrant Workers in Canada. Work, Employment and Society, 29(3), 409–426. https://doi.org/10.1177/0950017014559964