Thinking across agrarian class hierarchies in guest worker programs: Limitations to worker and farmer collective strategies

M. Dudley, Laura-Anne Minkoff-Zern, Michelle Tynan, Anna Zoodsma
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Abstract

Both farmers and workers utilize guest worker programs to gain access to the transnational food labor economy. Yet such programs reinforce both employees’ and farm owners’ relative lack of power in the global food system. This paper discusses the approaches farmers and workers utilizing the H-2A guest worker program in the United States employ to cope with such inequalities. We assess findings from qualitative interviews in New York state with current and former workers and farmers participating in the program. We find that farmers draw on regional agrarian communities with historically established networks to collectively manage labor acquisition, seasonality, and affordability. In contrast, the temporary nature of workers’ time in the United States limits their ability to establish deep social networks, and workers cope either by increasing their hours and commitment or by leaving the program to work in agriculture without work authorization. These temporal and spatial constraints further diminish worker power within the food system by limiting their ability to effectively organize for better conditions, with consequences for global food system equity.
在客籍工人计划中跨越农业阶级等级的思考:工人和农民集体战略的局限性
农民和工人都利用客籍工人计划进入跨国食品劳动经济。然而,这些计划加剧了雇员和农场主在全球粮食系统中相对缺乏权力的状况。本文讨论了美国农民和工人利用 H-2A 客籍工人计划应对这种不平等的方法。我们评估了在纽约州对参与该计划的现任和前任工人及农民的定性访谈结果。我们发现,农民利用地区农业社区历史上建立的网络来集体管理劳动力的获取、季节性和可负担性。与此相反,工人在美国工作的临时性限制了他们建立深层社会网络的能力,工人要么通过增加工作时间和投入来应对,要么通过离开计划,在没有工作许可的情况下从事农业工作。这些时间和空间上的限制进一步削弱了工人在粮食系统中的权力,限制了他们有效组织起来争取更好条件的能力,从而对全球粮食系统的公平性造成影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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