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Navigating the Productive/Reproductive Split: Latin American Transnational Mothers and Fathers in Canada's Temporary Migration Programs

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Navigating the Productive/Reproductive Split: Latin American Transnational Mothers and Fathers in Canada's Temporary Migration Programs
Abstract
This article explores the experiences of transnational agricultural migrant workers in Canada's guestworker programs. Examined through a gendered lens, it focuses on migrants' experiences as parents to children whom they must leave behind in their communities of origin when they migrate. Drawing on interview and ethnographic data, this article argues that transnational parents, especially mothers, face a unique set of challenges and barriers as participants in these programs. It explores how the injustices in the immigration-labor regime that migrants confront as racialized, non-citizen farm workers impact parents' ability to focus on their primary motivation to migrate—their children—thereby limiting their ability to fulfill idealized forms of motherhood and fatherhood and hindering their parent-child relationships. It also demonstrates that migrant mothers frequently experience increased feelings of self-doubt, guilt and inadequacy as transnational parents, which, in turn, diminishes the benefits of their migration.
Publication
Transnational Social Review
Volume
3
Issue
2
Pages
173-192
Date
2013
Language
English
ISSN
2193-1674
Short Title
Navigating the Productive/Reproductive Split
Accessed
12/28/14, 4:52 PM
Library Catalog
Taylor and Francis+NEJM
Citation
Paciulan, M., & Preibisch, K. (2013). Navigating the Productive/Reproductive Split: Latin American Transnational Mothers and Fathers in Canada’s Temporary Migration Programs. Transnational Social Review, 3(2), 173–192. https://doi.org/10.1080/21931674.2013.10820763