‘Modernising’ Employment Standards? Administrative Efficiency and the Production of the Illegitimate Claimant in Ontario, Canada
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Gellatly, Mary (Author)
- Grundy, John (Author)
- Mirchandani, Kiran (Author)
- Perry, J. Adam (Author)
- Thomas, Mark P. (Author)
- Vosko, Leah F. (Author)
Title
‘Modernising’ Employment Standards? Administrative Efficiency and the Production of the Illegitimate Claimant in Ontario, Canada
Abstract
In October 2010, the provincial government of Ontario, Canada enacted the Open for Business Act (OBA). A central component of the OBA is its provisions aiming to streamline the enforcement of Ontario’s Employment Standards Act (ESA). The OBA’s changes to the ESA are an attempt to manage a crisis of employment standards (ES) enforcement, arising from decades of ineffective regulation, by entrenching an individualised enforcement model. The Act aims to streamline enforcement by screening people assumed to be lacking definitive proof of violations out of the complaints process. The OBA therefore produces a new category of ‘illegitimate claimants’ and attributes administrative backlogs to these people. Instead of improving the protection of workers, the OBA embeds new racialised and gendered modes of exclusion in the ES enforcement process.
Publication
The Economic and Labour Relations Review
Volume
22
Issue
2
Pages
81-106
Date
2011/07
Language
English, espagnol
ISSN
1035-3046, 1838-2673
Short Title
‘Modernising’ Employment Standards?
Accessed
3/1/25, 7:53 PM
Citation
Gellatly, M., Grundy, J., Mirchandani, K., Perry, J. A., Thomas, M. P., & Vosko, L. F. (2011). ‘Modernising’ Employment Standards? Administrative Efficiency and the Production of the Illegitimate Claimant in Ontario, Canada. The Economic and Labour Relations Review, 22(2), 81–106. https://doi.org/10.1177/103530461102200205
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