1st Edition
Racism and the Incorporation of Foreign Labour Farm Labour Migration to Canada Since 1945
Part 1: Theoretical Issues: The Political Economy of Migration 1. Political Economy and Migration: A Critique of Castles and Kosack 2. Modes of Incorporation and Racialization Part 2: Foreign Labour Incorporation and Fruit and Vegetable Production 3. Labour Shortages and Alternatives to Labour Import in the Ontario Fruit and Vegetable Industry 4. ‘Without immigrants you don’t grow cash crops’: Foreign Labour in the Ontario Fruit and Vegetable Industry 5. The Racialization of Permanent Settlement 6. The Racialization of Caribbean Migrant Farm Labour 7. Conclusion: Modes of Incorporation.
Biography
Vic Satzewich is Professor of Sociology at McMaster University and Past-President of the Canadian Sociological Association. He has published as either author, co-author, editor or co-editor 10 books and over 70 articles and chapters in books on various aspects of immigration, racism, transnationalism and diasporas. Among his books are The Ukrainian Diaspora (Routledge, 2002), Racism in Canada (Toronto: Oxford University Press, 2011), Points of Entry: How Canada’s Immigration Officers Decide Who Gets In (University of British Columbia Press, 2015), and ‘Race’ and Ethnicity in Canada: A Critical Introduction (Toronto: Oxford University Press, 2021). He is the recipient of several awards, including the Canadian Sociological Association’s Outstanding Contributions Award and the John Porter Best Book Prize for Points of Entry. He is also the recipient of the Metropolis Canada Immigration Researcher Award, the Canadian Ethnic Studies Association Lifetime Achievement Award, and the McMaster University Research Impact Award. In 2022, he was Fulbright Canada Research Chair in Peace and War Studies at Norwich University in Vermont, USA.
Original Reviews of Racism and the Incorporation of Foreign Labour:
‘This book will be very useful to a broad spectrum of people working in a variety of disciplines, interested in the process of racialization and the process of migration in general as well as in Canada. It will also appeal to those who seek to develop a non-essentialist and dynamic approach to social phenomena which occupy a central place in today’s world.’ Danielle Juteau, University of Montréal
‘The book should not only be read by specialists in Canadian immigration. It signals an important concern with the practical realities of immigration bureaucracies…’ Josiah Mcc Heyman, International Migration Review Volume 26, Issue 4 (1992).






