Globalization and the Mexican-Canadian Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program: Power, racialization and transnationalism in temporary migration

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Globalization and the Mexican-Canadian Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program: Power, racialization and transnationalism in temporary migration
Abstract
This research investigates the formation and maintenance of power relations within the organization and everyday practices of work and transnational living, and the social and economic impacts among Mexican migrants and their families participating in the Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program (SAWP). Through the analysis of the qualitative data collected through ethnographic case studies in Mexico, 350 hours of participant observation, and semi-structured interviews with 25 migrant workers, 5 farmers and 5 representatives from other state and non-state intermediaries, findings have emerged pertaining to three research themes: power, racialization and transnationalism. This research finds that Mexican migrant workers are consistently located in subordinate power positions in the organization and the everyday practices of the SAWP; and governments, employers, and other intermediaries have significant control over migrants' daily lives and their migration parameters. Racialization processes in both the institutional and everyday practices of the SAWP produce, maintain, and legitimize a system of temporary migration characterized by imbalanced power relations and the unequal allocation of resources and rights through the differentiation of the "Mexican migrant worker" with reference to race and ethnicity. Migrant workers and their families actively participate in transnational practices that are integral to seasonal migration, including the family networks that facilitate entry into the program, the "migration work" performed by women, and the use of information and communication technologies (ICTs). This essential "migration work" involves preparing the family for migration and sustaining the transnational family through managing and/or working within family farms and small businesses, receiving and managing international remittance transfers and telephone calling, managing and utilizing remittances for daily living and development, and performing carework. These findings support the "transnationalization of culture" hypothesis, and indicate that a gendered culture of migration is emerging within the SAWP. It is argued that the SAWP is an exemplar of "time-space compression" in action which leads to the exploitation and subordination of "Mexican migrant workers." Temporary migration systems like the SAWP are seen as recursively related to globalization, where foreign labour dependence and remittance economies are created and perpetuated through globalization and a "migration industry" powered by new information and communication technologies.
Type
Ph.D., Sociology
University
University of Western Ontario
Place
London, Ontario
Date
2006
# of Pages
364
Language
English
Short Title
Globalization and the Mexican-Canadian Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program
Accessed
11/5/14, 12:51 AM
Library Catalog
ProQuest
Rights
Copyright ProQuest, UMI Dissertations Publishing 2006
Citation
Hennebry, J. L. (2006). Globalization and the Mexican-Canadian Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program: Power, racialization and transnationalism in temporary migration [Ph.D., Sociology, University of Western Ontario]. https://central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.item?id=NR30711&op=pdf&app=Library