The Social Quarantining of Migrant Labour: Everyday Effects of Temporary Foreign Worker Regulation in Canada

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
The Social Quarantining of Migrant Labour: Everyday Effects of Temporary Foreign Worker Regulation in Canada
Abstract
Low-wage migrant workers in wealthy nations occupy an ambiguous social and legal status that is inseparable from global economics and politics. This article adds to the growing and diverse literature on temporariness in labour and citizenship by reviewing Canada’s internationally recognised ‘model’ programme, the Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program (SAWP). Specifically, we present research on a small but rapidly growing peripheral pocket of workers in Nova Scotia, a less populated and more economically depressed province. Interview with former SAWP participants demonstrate how the uncertainty characterising the legal, immigration, and employment status of seasonal agricultural workers is socially practised and individually experienced. In particular, we show how specific elements of current migrant labour regulation have everyday effects in organising and delimiting non-work dimensions of migrant workers’ lives. In attending to the spatio-temporal dimensions of migrant workers’ lives we develop the concept social quarantining as a characteristic feature of former workers’ experiences ‘on the contract’.
Publication
Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Volume
43
Issue
5
Pages
713-730
Date
2017
Language
en
ISSN
1369-183X, 1469-9451
Short Title
The Social Quarantining of Migrant Labour
Accessed
7/15/18, 12:36 AM
Library Catalog
Crossref
Citation
Horgan, M., & Liinamaa, S. (2017). The Social Quarantining of Migrant Labour: Everyday Effects of Temporary Foreign Worker Regulation in Canada. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 43(5), 713–730. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1202752