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"The Both of Us Have Battled": The Practices and Politics of Female Partners in the Canadian Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
"The Both of Us Have Battled": The Practices and Politics of Female Partners in the Canadian Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program
Abstract
Through an analysis of qualitative, ethnographic data, I locate the narratives of nine Mexican women married to migrants within the context of capitalist globalization, state policies, and local gender ideologies. In doing so, advocate for a theoretical approach to migration which combines elements of structural theories of migration and network theoretical approaches. These women's narratives position them at the juncture of capitalism and other social relations, and show them to be active agents in migration. Not only is their labour critical to the maintenance of migration patterns and the capitalist relations into which migrants and non-migrants are incorporated, but women's labour is also imbued with social meanings.
Type
M.A., Latin American Studies Program
University
Simon Fraser University
Place
Burnaby, BC
Date
2007
# of Pages
104
Language
English
Short Title
"The Both of Us Have Battled"
Accessed
11/5/14, 12:52 AM
Library Catalog
ProQuest
Rights
Copyright ProQuest, UMI Dissertations Publishing 2007
Citation
Hanson, C. (2007). “The Both of Us Have Battled”: The Practices and Politics of Female Partners in the Canadian Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program [M.A., Latin American Studies Program, Simon Fraser University]. http://summit.sfu.ca/item/8371