In authors or contributors

Cultivating Farmworker Rights: Ending the Exploitation of Immigrant and Migrant Farmworkers in BC

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Cultivating Farmworker Rights: Ending the Exploitation of Immigrant and Migrant Farmworkers in BC
Abstract
A new study of farm work in BC reveals systematic violations of employment standards and health and safety regulations, poor and often dangerous working conditions, and dismal enforcement by government agencies. The study’s authors propose comprehensive policy changes that would ensure farmworkers — most of whom are immigrants and temporary migrants — are no longer relegated to second-class status. “Farmworkers are at the mercy of a complex and confusing system that exploits, threatens and silences them while putting their lives in danger,” says study co-author Arlene McLaren, Professor Emerita of Sociology at Simon Fraser University. The study draws from numerous sources, including interviews with key informants in government and the farm industry, interviews with 53 Indo-Canadian immigrant and Mexican migrant farmworkers, a survey 87 Mexican migrant farmworkers, and a review of better practices in other jurisdictions. The study is part of the Economic Security Project, a joint initiative of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and Simon Fraser University. --Publisher's description
Place
Vancouver, BC
Publisher
Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives
Date
2008
# of Pages
76 pages
ISBN
0-88627-581-4
Short Title
Cultivating farmworker rights
Library Catalog
Library of Congress ISBN
Call Number
HD1530.B8 C85 2008
Notes

Cover title "An economic security project report"--Cover

Citation
Fairey, D., Hanson, C., MacInnes, G., McLaren, A. T., Otero, G., & Thompson, M. (2008). Cultivating Farmworker Rights: Ending the Exploitation of Immigrant and Migrant Farmworkers in BC. Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives. https://www.policyalternatives.ca/sites/default/files/uploads/publications/BC_Office_Pubs/bc_2008/bc_farmworkers_full.pdf