Between hearts and pockets: locating the outcomes of transnational homemaking practices among Mexican women in Canada's temporary migration programmes
- Petsa
2013
- May-akda
Kerry Preibish and Evelyn Encalada Grez
- Buod
Temporary migration programmes (TMPs) contain features such as reduced costs and the social legitimation of regularized entry that allow women, including the very poor, to access transnational livelihoods. For mothers, taking up opportunities for employment abroad inevitably involves ‘transnational homemaking’, the set practices involved in caring for family relationships and maintaining household economies across borders. In this article, we examine the transnational homemaking practices undertaken by rural Mexican migrant women employed in highly masculinized TMPs in Canada, tracing how they construct and maintain household economies across borders through a delicate (re)negotiation of reproductive roles and responsibilities with non-migrating kin in Mexico. We find that migration yields material and subjective benefits that enable the expansion of their citizenship across multiple dimensions ranging from the economic to the sexual. At the same time, as racialized, gendered, migrants from the global South, their labour and status in Canada are highly precarious. The advantages derived from transnational migration are thus tenuous, limited, and contradictory.
- Journal title
Citizenship Studies
- Dami
17
- Numero
6-7
- Connections
- Pang-ekonomiyang sektor
Agriculture and horticulture workers and General farm workers
- Mga Uri ng Nilalaman
Statistics on work and life conditions
- Target na mga grupo
Mananaliksik
- Geographical kaugnayan
México and National relevance
- Spheres ng aktibidad
Socioligie
- Wika
Ingles