Through the Back-Door: How Australia and Canada Use Working Holiday Programs to Fulfill Demands for Migrant Work Via Cultural Exchange
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Vosko, Leah F. (Author)
Title
Through the Back-Door: How Australia and Canada Use Working Holiday Programs to Fulfill Demands for Migrant Work Via Cultural Exchange
Abstract
In Australia and Canada, working holidaymaking is rationalized on the basis of encouraging cultural exchange among youth. Yet, in both countries, there is mounting evidence that working holiday programs are operating as back-door migrant work programs to help fill demands for labor in occupations and industries characterized by precarious jobs undesirable to locals. As scholarship on working holidaymakers’ labor market participation is more developed in Australia than in Canada, and administrative data available are also more extensive therein, this article sheds new light on the Canadian case vis-à-vis the Australian example. In exploring regulatory strategies adopted by these two settler states and their effects, comparative analysis of administrative data and historical and contemporary immigration and labor and employment laws and policies reveals how nationally specific program design can foster similar ends: precariousness among participants in the industries in which working holidaymakers are concentrated, including agriculture, tourism, and accommodation and food services. It also shows that stratification between working holidaymakers more closely approximating the image of the “cultural sojourner” and those who are effectively migrating for work purposes takes shape principally along the lines of source country in both countries.
Publication
Journal of Industrial Relations
Volume
65
Issue
1
Pages
88-111
Date
2023
Journal Abbr
Journal of Industrial Relations
Language
en
ISSN
0022-1856, 1472-9296
Short Title
Through the Back-Door
Accessed
6/22/24, 5:12 PM
Library Catalog
DOI.org (Crossref)
Citation
Vosko, L. F. (2023). Through the Back-Door: How Australia and Canada Use Working Holiday Programs to Fulfill Demands for Migrant Work Via Cultural Exchange. Journal of Industrial Relations, 65(1), 88–111. https://doi.org/10.1177/00221856221131579
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