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Occupational health and safety for migrant domestic workers in Canada: dimensions of (im)mobility

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Article

Hill, Nicole S. ; Dorow, Sara ; Barnetson, Bob ; Martinez, Javier F. ; Matsunaga-Turnbull, Jared

New Solutions

2019

29

3

397-421

domestic worker ; migrant worker ; occupational safety and health

Canada

Occupational safety and health

https://journals.sagepub.com/loi/NEW

https://doi.org/10.1177/1048291119867740

English

Bibliogr.

"This study examines the occupational health and safety experiences of migrant workers employed as live-in caregivers in Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada. Interviews with and surveys of caregivers identify four categories of common occupational hazards, including fatigue, psychosocial stress, physical hazards, and exposure to harassment and abuse. These hazards are systemically perpetuated, made invisible, and rendered irremediable by intertwined (im)mobilities. At the macrolevel, they include highly circumscribed and precarious conditions of transnational care migration such as indenturing to private and underregulated recruiters, federal policies that tie status to employers and employment, and changeable, rule-bound pathways to permanent residency. At the mesolevel, we find a volatile mix of mobilities and immobilities associated with employment in the oil economy of Fort McMurray, such as high population mobility and turnover, long work and commuting hours, and remoteness. And, at the microlevel, we find the everyday immobilities and highly circumscribed conditions and complexities of working and living with employers in private homes."

Digital



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