Understanding Migrant Farmworkers' Health and Well-Being during the Global COVID-19 Pandemic in Canada: Toward a Transnational Conceptualization of Employment Strain

Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Jul 14;19(14):8574. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19148574.

Abstract

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Canada imposed certain international travel bans and work-from-home orders, yet migrant farmworkers, declared essential to national food security, were exempt from such measures. In this context, farm worksites proved to be particularly prone to COVID-19 outbreaks. To apprehend this trend, we engaged an expanded and transnational employment strain framework that identified the employment demands and resources understood from a transnational perspective, as well as the immigration, labour, and public health policies and practices contributing to and/or buffering employment demands during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. We applied mixed methods to analyze administrative data, immigration, labour, and public health policy, as well as qualitative interviews with thirty migrant farmworkers employed in Ontario and Quebec. We concluded that the deleterious outcomes of the pandemic for this group were rooted in the deplorable pre-pandemic conditions they endured. Consequently, the band-aid solutions adopted by federal and provincial governments to address these conditions before and during the pandemic were limited in their efficacy because they failed to account for the transnational employment strains among precarious status workers labouring on temporary employer-tied work permits. Such findings underscore the need for transformative policies to better support health equity among migrant farmworkers in Canada.

Keywords: COVID-19; Canada; employment strain; health and well-being; migrant farmworkers; precarious status; temporary labour migration; transnational lives; work.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • COVID-19* / epidemiology
  • Concept Formation
  • Farmers
  • Humans
  • Ontario
  • Pandemics
  • Transients and Migrants*
  • Workplace

Grants and funding

The coauthors of this article received support in the form of stipends for research assistance from the International Labour Organization to prepare an independent report on the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on migrant farmworkers in Canada as a background study for the ILO’s World Employment and Social Outlook Report (L.F. Vosko, Principal Investigator; contract number: 40353895). This article is based on that study. Leah F. Vosko also thanks the Canada Research Chairs Program for its financial support. Additional support for this article was drawn from Tanya Basok’s University of Windsor internal research funds from the University of Windsor and Glynis George’s MITACS Partnership grant.