Janitors and Sweatshop Citizenship in Canada

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Janitors and Sweatshop Citizenship in Canada
Abstract
Janitors in Canada increasingly suffer from what I call here “sweatshop citizenship”, which is a combination of disintegrating workplace rights and eroding social citizenship rights. This condition has been institutionalized by neoliberal state policies which have undermined the welfare state and the assumptions of citizenship which it embodied. Through an exploration of how sweatshop citizenship is being instituted in Ontario and British Columbia, I consider the difficulties which contemporary industrial practices in the cleaning industry and anti-union legislation are presenting janitors, together with the possibility for their resisting such conditions.
Publication
Antipode
Volume
38
Issue
3
Pages
440-461
Date
2006
Language
en
ISSN
1467-8330
Accessed
12/9/14, 1:23 AM
Library Catalog
Wiley Online Library
Citation
Aguiar, L. L. M. (2006). Janitors and Sweatshop Citizenship in Canada. Antipode, 38(3), 440–461. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0066-4812.2006.00589.x