Breaking the Iron Wall: Decommodification and Immigrant Women's Labor in Canada

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Author: Habiba Zaman

ISBN-10: 073911235X

ISBN-13: 9780739112359

Category: Immigration & Emigration

In the latter half of the twentieth century, as immigrant-receiving countries such as Canada began competing to recruit the "most desirable" candidates, immigrants became commodified, their labor bought and sold for the benefit of national and global markets. By providing empirical as well as historical evidence, Habiba Zaman undertakes a rigorous analysis of immigrant women's commodification and the possibility of their decommodification in Canada. In order to present a comprehensive picture...

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By providing empirical as well as historical evidence, Habiba Zaman undertakes a rigorous analysis of immigrant women's commodification and the possibility of their decommodification in Canada.

Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Globalization, Neo-Liberal Globalism, and Migration Chapter 3 Canadian Immigration in an Era of Neo-Liberalism: Trends and Impacts Chapter 4 The Canadian State and Immigrant Labor: Intersections of Gender, Class, and Race Chapter 5 Commodification of Laborers: "Defamilializing" the Privileged and "Refeudalizing" the Im / Migrants Chapter 6 Decommodification and Immigrant Women: Access to Social Benefits and Services Chapter 7 Recommodification of Labor: Results of Re-Skilling Chapter 8 Immigrant Women as Agents of Change: The Role of Networks and Associations Chapter 9 Summary and Conclusions

\ Signs: Journal Of Women In Culture & SocietyZaman has written a passionate brief.\ \ \ \ \ Signs: Journal of Women In Culture & SocietyZaman has written a passionate brief.\ \ \ Journal of Women, Politics and SocietyZaman's book adds to the feminist literature in this field...[she] effectively places her research within the scholarship on the welfare state...This book is very timely as the issue of immigration is once more at the forefront of political debates...\ \ \ \ \ Cecilia DiocsonWhile past migration may have been driven by the process of nation building, Zaman shows that today's transnational migration is largely market-driven where various global actors reap large profits off the backs of these migrant workers....\ This is a good read not only for academics but for feminists and migration advocates who want to understand the dynamics of transnational migration and the feminization of migration.\ \ \ \ \ Signs: Journal of Women In Culture & SocietyZaman has written a passionate brief.\ \ \ \ \ Sunera ThobaniExamining the processes that commodify immigrant women's labour in Canada through the lived experiences of these women, this book makes a valuable contribution to the field of globalization and migration studies.\ \