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Transnational Employment Strain In A Global Health Pandemic Migrant Farmworkres In Canada Leah F Vosko

  • SKU: BELL-47633170
Transnational Employment Strain In A Global Health Pandemic Migrant Farmworkres In Canada Leah F Vosko
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Transnational Employment Strain In A Global Health Pandemic Migrant Farmworkres In Canada Leah F Vosko instant download after payment.

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.62 MB
Pages: 157
Author: Leah F. Vosko, Tanya Basok, Cynthia Spring
ISBN: 9783031177033, 3031177037
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Transnational Employment Strain In A Global Health Pandemic Migrant Farmworkres In Canada Leah F Vosko by Leah F. Vosko, Tanya Basok, Cynthia Spring 9783031177033, 3031177037 instant download after payment.

The 2020-22 COVID-19 pandemic reinforced inequalities between the global North and South, amplifying pre-existing disparities between migrant and citizen/permanent resident workers in receiving and sending states worldwide. In contexts such as Canada, it also underscored that many workers in occupations and sectors deemed “essential” enough to be exempt from stay-at-home orders and other public safety measures are migrants, a sizeable number of whom sustain Canada’s food supply through their work in its agricultural industry. This book explores the dynamics behind the pandemic’s deleterious outcomes for this vital group of workers, highlighting migrant farmworkers importance to the Canadian economy, society, and the world of work alongside the conditions they endured before and during the global health pandemic through policy and media analysis and open-ended interviews with workers enrolled in two streams of Canada’s Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP) as well as migrants without legal status employed in agriculture located in Ontario and Quebec. Advancing the notion of transnational employment strain, the authors derive insight from the employment strain model, a framework for understanding risks to the physical and psychological well-being of workers, and expand it to account for migrants’ relationships across transnational space.

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