2017
Emily Reid-Musson
"So-called ‘transient workers’ from Quebec and Atlantic Canada made up a significant proportion of
Ontario’s tobacco harvest workforce in the postwar era, though there is no existing research on this
migrant population. Based on analysis of an unexamined archive, the article explores the relationship
between seasonal transient workers, Ontario tobacco growers, and the federal Canadian government
during the 1960s and 1970s. Migrants harnessed strategic forms of mobility or marketplace agency in
precarious, unorganized and seasonal tobacco work. Further, the deepening of migrant precarity in
Ontario agriculture can in part be traced back to this period of conflict between transients, tobacco
growers and different levels of the Canadian government. Migrant precarity did not go uncontested
among this population. Managed migration programs, still operational today, reflect the attempt to
undermine migrants’ informal mobility agency. Transients travelled to find tobacco jobs with few
constraints or pressures other than the compulsion to gain wages, using their relative freedom of
mobility strategically, especially in public spaces, to disrupt local micro-hegemonies in tobacco areas.
Government programs to manage farm labour migration were unveiled during this period in part to
displace transients and solve a widely reported ‘‘transient problem’’ in tobacco."
Geoforum
56
161-171
Elsevier
Natural resources, agriculture and related production occupations - general
Canada, Ontario, Alberta, Manitoba, Quebec, British Columbia, Other provinces, Federal, Nova Scotia, and National relevance
English