Deadline for the submission of abstracts now extended until the 20th of 
November.


Labour geography and migrant work

Labour geographers have recently highlighted the connections between precarity 
and migration of workers at many sites around the world (Coe, 2013). The 
subdiscipline has developed renewed focus on the experience of migrant workers 
as they strive to overcome the challenges of deteriorating working conditions 
under intensified work- place regimes (Wills et al, 2010; McDowell, 2013). 
These trends are most evident in, but not exclusive to, workers in low-waged 
and/or low-status jobs, or jobs that are regulated as "low-skilled", including 
hospitality, construction, retail, agriculture, food processing and social care.

This is a call for papers that explore the causes and consequences of the 
concentration or clustering of migrant workers in precarious working 
conditions, and how this impacts the ability of these workers to construct 
their daily lives within their adopted city or location. Papers that make the 
workplace the point of departure for understanding workers’ daily experiences 
would be welcomed as would be those that focus on workplace discrimination; 
access to benefits, good housing and transportation; and relationships within 
and outside the workplace. We also welcome papers based on research using 
single or multiple methods including census analysis, surveys, ethnography 
and/or life history interviews.

Papers are encouraged that explore workers' experiences in a manner that 
contribute something (beyond simply offering new empirical case studies) to a) 
methodological innovations/discussions about how to explore workplace/workers' 
experience; b) efforts to theorize migrants' agency that unpack the spatial and 
structural conditions that constrain or enable particular forms of agency; c) 
explore workers' experiences as a means to theorize precariousness beyond 
immigration status and employment conditions. Studies based on research sites 
across the globe, including provincial cities, rural sites, and large cities in 
the global north and south, will be welcome.

Keywords: migrant labour, workplace experience, segmentation, agency, 
precarious working conditions

Siobhán McPhee, University of British Columbia

Michelle Buckley, University of Toronto

Ben Rogaly, University of Sussex

Please send abstracts of up to 250 words to [email protected] by 
November 20th [NB early bird discount ends of Oct 23rd]

References:
Coe, N. (2013). Geographies of production III: making space for

labour, Progress in Human Geography, 37 (2): 271-284.
McDowell, L. (2013). Working Lives: Gender, Migration and

Employment in Britain 1945-2007, London: Wiley-Blackwell.

Wills, J. et al. (2010). Global Cities at Work - New Migrant Divisions of 
Labour London: Pluto Press.

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