The Bureaucratic and Political Work of Immigration Classifications: an Analysis of the Temporary Foreign Workers Program and Access to Settlement Services in Canada
Sarah Elizabeth Roberts ()
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Sarah Elizabeth Roberts: University of Toronto
Journal of International Migration and Integration, 2020, vol. 21, issue 3, No 17, 973-992
Abstract:
Abstract While migrant workers play an important role in maintaining the Canadian work force, unlike permanent residents and Canadian citizens, they are permitted to work in Canada only for short durations, with limitations placed on who they can work for, where they can live, and what services they have available to support them. The uneven allocation of rights to immigrants and migrants is enabled by a multifaceted immigration bureaucracy and the application of what I term immigration classifications. This analysis applies the lens of classification theory to examine the multilayered work that classifications do in the management of the Temporary Foreign Workers Program (TFWP) and access to settlement services. It finds that, built into immigration classifications is a prioritization of economic considerations of what make immigrants desirable for long-term settlement in Canada. These considerations further shape understandings of the role the state should take in supporting immigrants and migrants. This economic-focused perspective is prioritized at the expense of considerations of the human rights and settlement needs of migrant workers, leaving them systematically marginalized and vulnerable to abuse.
Keywords: Classification; Policy; Immigration; Settlement; Temporary Foreign Workers Program; Migrant workers (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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DOI: 10.1007/s12134-019-00693-w
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