Tracking Precarity: Employment Pathways of Precarious Status Migrant Workers in Canada
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Foster, Jason (Author)
Title
Tracking Precarity: Employment Pathways of Precarious Status Migrant Workers in Canada
Abstract
In recent years the issue of migrant workers with precarious status has increased in importance in Canada, in large part due to economic and policy changes that have led to greater numbers of migrant workers remaining in the country post permit expiry. This study tracks the employment experiences of low-skilled migrant workers who arrived through the Temporary Foreign Worker Program and who remained following their permit expiry. Using a temporal analysis, the study identifies four timepoints that shape the workers’ employment outcomes both pre- and post-expiry. Events at these timepoints create differing employment pathways that, in turn, reveal different aspects of the workers’ precarity. In addition to pathways, workers’ ability to access informal support networks shape their employment outcomes as workers with precarious status.
Publication
Canadian Journal of Sociology
Volume
46
Issue
3
Pages
257-278
Date
2021
Language
en
ISSN
1710-1123
Short Title
Tracking Precarity
Accessed
6/13/23, 5:54 PM
Library Catalog
journals.library.ualberta.ca
Rights
Copyright (c) 2021 Jason Foster
Extra
Number: 3
Citation
Foster, J. (2021). Tracking Precarity: Employment Pathways of Precarious Status Migrant Workers in Canada. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 46(3), 257–278. https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/cjs/index.php/CJS/article/view/29715
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