Migrant farmworkers: Resisting and organising before, during and after COVID‐19

Author:

Venkatesh Vasanthi1,Esnard Talia2,Bogoeski Vladimir3,Ferrando Tomaso4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Law and J4MW‐Windsor Law Migrant Farm Worker Legal Clinic University of Windsor Windsor Ontario Canada

2. The University of the West Indies Saint Augustine Trinidad and Tobago

3. Amsterdam Centre for Transformative Private Law (ACT), Amsterdam Law School University of Amsterdam Amsterdam Netherlands

4. Faculty of Law, Law and Development Research Group University of Antwerp Antwerp Belgium

Abstract

AbstractMigrant farmworkers are a ubiquitous but invisibilised, expropriated and exploited component of the global agricultural economy. Their conditions took centre‐stage during the COVID‐19 pandemic. Fear of production disruption in the migrant labour‐intensive sectors led to foreign workers being deemed ‘essential’ in many countries, and exceptional procedures and regulations were instituted that further increased their exploitation, illnesses and deaths. However, the pandemic has not merely exposed the long‐established structures of racialised exploitation and expropriation in the domain of farm work. Although it exacerbated the precariousness of the living and working conditions defining the reality of migrant farm workers, there is evidence that the pandemic also strengthened farmworkers' individual and collective consciousness, along with forms of organisation and resistance. The symposium ‘Migrant Farmworkers: Resisting and Organizing before, during and after COVID‐19’ explores two dimensions reflected in migrant farmworkers' realities during the pandemic. First, the contributions look at the general conditions defining power structures and material outcomes within the political economy of agriculture before and during the pandemic. Second, they explore the conditions under which resistance and solidarity emerged to question established structures of exploitation.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Archeology,Anthropology,Archeology,Global and Planetary Change

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