Reproducing Deportability: Migrant Agricultural Workers in South-western Ontario
- Fecha
2013
- Autores
Tanya Basok, Danièle Bélanger , y Eloy Rivas
- Resumen
Deportability, or a threat of deportation, can be viewed as a technique of discipline employed to make migrant workers efficient and compliant. Under the threat of deportation, migrants accept dangerous, dirty, degrading and difficult jobs for low pay. Deportability also prevents them from challenging their working and living conditions either individually or collectively. Most of the literature on deportability applies to unauthorised migrants. Yet, as illustrated in this article, migrants employed legally on temporary contracts are also disciplined through a threat of deportation. While for unauthorised migrants, it is the receiving state that is the most important actor (re)creating the regime of deportability, for legally employed migrants, other actors––such as employers, the sending states, recruiters and international organisations––assume a more important role in employing the threat of deportation as a disciplinary technique. In this article, we explore how power is reproduced in this disciplinary regime of deportability. We examine migrants' responses to the techniques of discipline that subjugate them. We argue that when migrants adopt calculative and reflexive practices to avoid deportation and secure their own employment, they often end up reproducing the disciplinary power of the deportation regime.
- Journal title
Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
- Archivos adjuntos
- Conexiones
- Los sectores económicos
Agriculture and horticulture workers y General farm workers
- Los grupos destinatarios
Los investigadores
- Relevancia geográfica
Ontario
- Esferas de la actividad
Derecho, Ciencias Políticas, y Socioligie
- Idiomas
Inglés