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Sustaining Precarious Transnational Families: The Significance of Remittances from Canada's Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Sustaining Precarious Transnational Families: The Significance of Remittances from Canada's Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program
Abstract
Accelerating flows of remittances are dwarfing global development aid. This study deepens our understanding of remittance impacts on the families of workers who come to Canada annually for several months under the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program (SAWP). Interviews with SAWP workers, their spouses, adult children and teachers in Mexico deepen our understanding of the impacts of these remittances. They demonstrate that the remittances are often literally a lifeline to transnational family survival, allowing them to pay for basic needs such as shelter, food, and medical care. Yet, at the same time, the remittances do not allow most of these workers and their families to escape deep poverty and significant precarity, including new forms of precarity generated by the SAWP. Instead, SAWP remittances help reduce poverty, at least temporarily, to more moderate levels while precarious poverty expands through global neoliberal underdevelopment.
Publication
Just Labour: A Canadian Journal of Work and Society
Volume
22
Pages
144-167
Date
Autumn 2014
Citation
Wells, D., McLaughlin, J., Lyn, A., & Díaz Mendiburo, A. (2014). Sustaining Precarious Transnational Families: The Significance of Remittances from Canada’s Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program. Just Labour: A Canadian Journal of Work and Society, 22, 144–167. http://www.justlabour.yorku.ca/volume22/pdfs/09_wells_et_al_press.pdf