Transient Servitude: Migrant Labour in Canada and the Apartheid of Citizenship
Resource type
            
        Author/contributor
                    - Walia, Harsha (Author)
 
Title
            Transient Servitude: Migrant Labour in Canada and the Apartheid of Citizenship
        Abstract
            Shifts in Canada’s immigration policy, most recently linked to the Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP) with the US and Mexico, have created an increased reliance on temporary migrant workers, who constitute a disposable workforce, driven from their own countries by the same forces of neoliberal capitalism which foster their super-exploitation in the Canadian labour market. In this article, the operation of two migrant worker programmes, the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program (SAWP) and Live-in Caregiver Program (LCP), are considered in the context of the province of British Columbia. The various means by which migrant workers are maintained in a state of vulnerability, available as a pool of cheap labour but excluded from belonging to the nation, are discussed. The article concludes by examining examples and further possibilities of alliances across social movements in BC in order to advance the struggle for human dignity.
        Publication
            Race & Class
        Volume
            52
        Issue
            1
        Pages
            71-84
        Date
            2010
        Journal Abbr
            Race & Class
        Language
            English
        ISSN
            0306-3968
        Accessed
            11/3/18, 8:38 PM
        Citation
            Walia, H. (2010). Transient Servitude: Migrant Labour in Canada and the Apartheid of Citizenship. Race & Class, 52(1), 71–84. https://doi.org/10.1177/0306396810371766
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