Rules of Disengagement: 'Low Skill' Migrant Workers, Law and the Social Dimensions of Exclusionary Inclusion
Ce document est une ressource clé
- Date
 2014
- Auteurs
 Brendan B. Jowett
- Résumé
 This thesis interrogates social exclusion among migrant workers under the NOC C & D (“low skill”) occupational stream of Canada’s Temporary Foreign Worker Program, a relatively new, fast-growing, and highly diverse stream which brings migrant workers into industry sectors and social settings where they were never seen before. The author develops a framework for understanding law’s role in producing social exclusion, and applies it to ethnographic data collected through interviews with migrant justice advocates and migrant workers in Brandon, Manitoba. This thesis ultimately establishes that migrant workers need not face spatial separation, discrimination from the community, or a historically gendered and racialized labour context in order to experience social exclusion; the author argues that social exclusion is legally constructed and that the legal framework of this program itself presents barriers to migrants’ full participation in the life of the communities in which they live and work.
- Université
 York University (Osgoode Law)
- Département académique
 Faculty of Law
- Niveau
 LL.M.
- Fichiers joints
 - Liens
 - Mots-clés
 migrant workers, law, Temporary Foreign Worker Program, immigration law, social exclusion, NOC C & D, low skill, legal anthropology, labour migration, socio-legal studies, ethnography
- Secteurs économiques
 General relevance - all sectors
- Types de contenu
 Policy analysis et Current Policy
- Groupes cibles
 Sensibilisation du public, Chercheurs et ONG/groupes communautaires/réseaux de solidarité
- Pertinence géographique
 Manitoba
- Langues
 Anglais
