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Realities of Precarity in Canada's Seasonal Fields: Struggles, Advocacy, and Restricted Spaces and Voices

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Realities of Precarity in Canada's Seasonal Fields: Struggles, Advocacy, and Restricted Spaces and Voices
Abstract
The following thesis examines the complex reality of temporary migration within Canada's agricultural sector by investigating the Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program (SAWP). The relevance of this inquiry hosts far-reaching implications for not only the wellbeing of migrant workers, but for the Canadian food-system, as well as migrant sending states. Furthermore, this research contributes additional knowledge and insights regarding the evolving interconnections between the climate and migration crisis that host critical impacts for Canada and the world moreover. In analyzing the impact of the SAWP on migrant workers' lives through two case studies, the project explores the interplay between climate change, globalization, neoliberalism, and liberalization in shaping the precarity faced by migrant workers in Canada. Despite the commonly advertised benefits of the SAWP, the study finds that structural barriers and power imbalances limit the realization of these benefits for migrant workers. The study ultimately explores the divided calls for reform across the sector, revealing the influence of widespread industry malpractice, and the presence of entrenched power hierarchies that have served to dominate the scope and direction of change. The research finds that the SAWP's structure and the broader context of inequalities related to globalization and neoliberalism hinder migrant workers' ability to leverage their assets and improve their livelihoods in Canada.
Type
M.A., International Development and Global Studies
University
University of Ottawa
Place
Ottawa
Date
2025
# of Pages
107 pages
Language
English
Accessed
1/30/25, 5:55 PM
Library Catalog
ruor.uottawa.ca
Citation
Patterson, D. (2025). Realities of Precarity in Canada’s Seasonal Fields: Struggles, Advocacy, and Restricted Spaces and Voices [M.A., International Development and Global Studies, University of Ottawa]. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/50141