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The Hidden Work of Challenging Precarity

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
The Hidden Work of Challenging Precarity
Abstract
This article explores the hidden work of workers employed in precarious jobs which are characterized by part-time and temporary contracts, limited control over work schedules, and poor access to regulatory protection. Through 77 semi-structured interviews with workers in low-wage, precarious jobs in Ontario, Canada, we examine workers’ attempts to challenge the precarity they face when confronted by workplace conditions violating the Ontario Employment Standards Act (ESA), such as not being paid minimum wages, not being paid for overtime, being fired wrongfully or being subject to reprisals. We argue that these challenges involve hidden work, which is neither acknowledged nor recognized in the current ESA enforcement regime. We examine three types of hidden work that involve (1) creating a sense of positive self-worth amidst disempowering practices; (2) engaging in advocacy vis-à-vis employers, sometimes through launching official claims with the Ontario Ministry of Labour; and (3) developing strategies to avoid the costs of precarity in the future. We argue that this hidden work of challenging precarity needs to be formally recognized and that concrete strategies for doing so might lead to more robust protection for workers, particularly within ESA enforcement practices.
Publication
Canadian Journal of Sociology
Volume
45
Issue
3
Pages
265-288
Date
2020
Language
en
ISSN
1710-1123
Accessed
10/26/21, 4:50 PM
Library Catalog
journals.library.ualberta.ca
Rights
Copyright (c) 2020 Kiran Mirchandani, Mary Jean Hande
Extra
Number: 3
Citation
Mirchandani, K., & Hande, M. J. (2020). The Hidden Work of Challenging Precarity. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 45(3), 265–288. https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/cjs/index.php/CJS/article/view/29676