- Fecha
2006
- Autores
Maya Shapiro
- Resumen
Over the course of the four decades that the Seasonal Agricultural Workers' Program has operated as an international labour recruitment initiative for Canadian farmers, a variety of community groups, churches, and non-profit organizations have mobilized around the causes of the Mexican and Caribbean migrant workers who call rural Canada their temporary home. This paper explores and analyzes the activities of one urban-based social justice collective dedicated to building a politicized movement that is driven by migrant workers themselves, and that brings together individuals from various sending countries. From internal ideological struggles to large-scale structural barriers, the collective as a whole and its individual members must grapple with a range of challenges. These challenges and the strategies employed to overcome them demonstrate the complexities of civil society organizing and political activism in the context of one of Canada's most infamous managed migration programs.
- Universidad
York University (Canada)
- Lugar de publicación
Canada
- Archivos adjuntos
- Los sectores económicos
Agriculture and horticulture workers
- Tipos de contenido
Iniciativas de apoyo
- Los grupos destinatarios
ONG / grupos comunitarios / redes de solidaridad
- Relevancia geográfica
Estados Unidos, Otras provincias, América del Sur, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, y Regional relevance
- Idiomas
Inglés