2010
Kerry Preibisch and Evelyn Encalada Grez
Global
restructuring is dramatically reshaping how women and men around the
world relate to agriculture. While gender analysis has been central to
research on labor‐intensive, corporate agriculture in the global South,
it is rarely invoked in the literature exploring these trends in the
North. Moreover, research on gender in agriculture in high‐income
countries has tended to focus on women in family farms, despite
extensive restructuring of the sector that has increased demands for
waged laborers. This article speaks to these limitations by tracing the
incorporation of Mexican women into the Canadian agricultural sector as
temporary migrant workers. In exploring the lived realities of these
women, it reveals workplaces characterized by highly gendered,
racialized employment relations and illustrates how temporary migrant
worker programs further entrench existing structures of labor
segmentation in agriculture. While temporary migrant worker programs
have brought greater flexibility into the Canadian agricultural labor
market by enabling a particular set of employment practices that rest
on gendered, racialized subjectivities, these processes are by no means
uncontested by the actors they seek to command.
Journal of Women in Culture and Society
35
2
289-316
University of Chicago
Chicago
Agriculture and horticulture workers
Policy analysis
Researchers, Unions, and NGOs/community groups/solidarity networks
Canada, Ontario, Alberta, México, Manitoba, Quebec, British Columbia, Other provinces, Federal, Nova Scotia, and National relevance
Economics, Gender and sexuality studies, and Sociology
English