Luin Goldring, Patricia Landolt
Producing and Negotiating Non-Citizenship
Precarious Legal Status in Canada
Luin Goldring, Patricia Landolt
Producing and Negotiating Non-Citizenship
Precarious Legal Status in Canada
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This timely volume contributes to conceptualizing multiple forms of precarious status non-citizenship as connected through policy and the practices of migrants and the institutional actors they encounter.
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This timely volume contributes to conceptualizing multiple forms of precarious status non-citizenship as connected through policy and the practices of migrants and the institutional actors they encounter.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 400
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. März 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 228mm x 154mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 590g
- ISBN-13: 9781442614086
- ISBN-10: 1442614080
- Artikelnr.: 37046960
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 400
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. März 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 228mm x 154mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 590g
- ISBN-13: 9781442614086
- ISBN-10: 1442614080
- Artikelnr.: 37046960
Luin Goldring is an associate professor in the Department of Sociology at York University. Patricia Landolt is an associate professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Toronto, Scarborough.
List of Figures
List of Tables
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1: Precarious Legal Status in Canada: Theorizing Non-citizenship
and Conditionality - Luin Goldring (York University) and Patricia Landolt
(University of Toronto, Scarborough)
Part I. Producing Precarious Status and Illegality in Canada
Chapter 2: The Museum of Illegal Immigration: Historical Perspectives on
the Production of Non-Citizens and Challenges to Immigration Controls -
Cynthia Wright (University of Toronto)
Chapter 3: The Shifting Landscape of Contemporary Canadian Immigration
Policy: The Rise of Temporary Migration and Employer-Driven Immigration -
Salimah Valiani (Ontario Nurses’ Association)
Chapter 4: The Canadian Temporary Foreign Worker Program: Regulations,
Practices and Protection Gaps - Delphine Nakache (University of Ottawa)
Part II. Precarious Status and Everyday Lives
Chapter 5: ‘This is my life:’ Youth Negotiating Legality and Belonging in
Toronto - Julie E.E. Young (York University)
Chapter 6: Constructing Coping Strategies: Migrants Seeking Stability in
Social Networks - Katherine Brasch (University of Toronto)
Chapter 7: The Cost of Invisibility: The Psychosocial Impact of Falling Out
of Status - Samia Saad (York University)
Chapter 8: The Social Production of Non-citizenship: Legal Transitions and
the Long Term Impacts of Precarious Status on Work - Patricia Landolt
(University of Toronto, Scarborough) and Luin Goldring (York University)
Chapter 9: Pathways to Precarity: Structural Vulnerabilities and Lived
Consequences for Migrant Farmworkers in Canada - Janet McLaughlin (Wilfrid
Laurier) and Jenna Hennebry (Wilfrid Laurier)
Chapter 10: Precarious Immigration Status and Precarious Housing Pathways:
Refugee Claimant Homelessness in Toronto and Vancouver - Priya Kissoon
(University of Toronto, Scarborough)
Part III. Institutional Negotiations of Membership and Rights
Chapter 11: Negotiating the Boundaries of Membership: Healthcare Providers,
Access to Social Goods and Immigration Status - Paloma Villegas (Ontario
Institute for Studies in Education at University of Toronto)
Chapter 12: “People’s Priorities Change when their Status Changes:”
Negotiating the Conditionality of Social Rights in Service Delivery to
Migrant Women - Rupaleem Bhuyan (University of Toronto)
Chapter 13: Getting to "Don’t Ask Don’t Tell" at the Toronto District
School Board: Mapping the Competing Discourses of Rights and Membership of
Institutional Stakeholders - Francisco Villegas (Ontario Institute for
Studies in Education at University of Toronto)
Chapter 14: No One Is Illegal Movements in Canada and the Negotiation of
Counter-national and Anti-colonial Struggles from Within the Nation-state -
Craig Fortier (York University)
Chapter 15: From Access to Empowerment: The Committee for Accessible AIDS
Treatment Experience Working with People Living with HIV-AIDS with
Precarious Status - Alan Li (Ontario HIV Treatment Network)
Chapter 16: Institutional Regulation of Research on Families and Legal
status: Negotiating Competing Notions of Risk in a Canadian University
Context - Julie E.E. Young (York University) and Judith K. Bernhard
(Ryerson University)
List of Tables
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1: Precarious Legal Status in Canada: Theorizing Non-citizenship
and Conditionality - Luin Goldring (York University) and Patricia Landolt
(University of Toronto, Scarborough)
Part I. Producing Precarious Status and Illegality in Canada
Chapter 2: The Museum of Illegal Immigration: Historical Perspectives on
the Production of Non-Citizens and Challenges to Immigration Controls -
Cynthia Wright (University of Toronto)
Chapter 3: The Shifting Landscape of Contemporary Canadian Immigration
Policy: The Rise of Temporary Migration and Employer-Driven Immigration -
Salimah Valiani (Ontario Nurses’ Association)
Chapter 4: The Canadian Temporary Foreign Worker Program: Regulations,
Practices and Protection Gaps - Delphine Nakache (University of Ottawa)
Part II. Precarious Status and Everyday Lives
Chapter 5: ‘This is my life:’ Youth Negotiating Legality and Belonging in
Toronto - Julie E.E. Young (York University)
Chapter 6: Constructing Coping Strategies: Migrants Seeking Stability in
Social Networks - Katherine Brasch (University of Toronto)
Chapter 7: The Cost of Invisibility: The Psychosocial Impact of Falling Out
of Status - Samia Saad (York University)
Chapter 8: The Social Production of Non-citizenship: Legal Transitions and
the Long Term Impacts of Precarious Status on Work - Patricia Landolt
(University of Toronto, Scarborough) and Luin Goldring (York University)
Chapter 9: Pathways to Precarity: Structural Vulnerabilities and Lived
Consequences for Migrant Farmworkers in Canada - Janet McLaughlin (Wilfrid
Laurier) and Jenna Hennebry (Wilfrid Laurier)
Chapter 10: Precarious Immigration Status and Precarious Housing Pathways:
Refugee Claimant Homelessness in Toronto and Vancouver - Priya Kissoon
(University of Toronto, Scarborough)
Part III. Institutional Negotiations of Membership and Rights
Chapter 11: Negotiating the Boundaries of Membership: Healthcare Providers,
Access to Social Goods and Immigration Status - Paloma Villegas (Ontario
Institute for Studies in Education at University of Toronto)
Chapter 12: “People’s Priorities Change when their Status Changes:”
Negotiating the Conditionality of Social Rights in Service Delivery to
Migrant Women - Rupaleem Bhuyan (University of Toronto)
Chapter 13: Getting to "Don’t Ask Don’t Tell" at the Toronto District
School Board: Mapping the Competing Discourses of Rights and Membership of
Institutional Stakeholders - Francisco Villegas (Ontario Institute for
Studies in Education at University of Toronto)
Chapter 14: No One Is Illegal Movements in Canada and the Negotiation of
Counter-national and Anti-colonial Struggles from Within the Nation-state -
Craig Fortier (York University)
Chapter 15: From Access to Empowerment: The Committee for Accessible AIDS
Treatment Experience Working with People Living with HIV-AIDS with
Precarious Status - Alan Li (Ontario HIV Treatment Network)
Chapter 16: Institutional Regulation of Research on Families and Legal
status: Negotiating Competing Notions of Risk in a Canadian University
Context - Julie E.E. Young (York University) and Judith K. Bernhard
(Ryerson University)
List of Figures
List of Tables
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1: Precarious Legal Status in Canada: Theorizing Non-citizenship
and Conditionality - Luin Goldring (York University) and Patricia Landolt
(University of Toronto, Scarborough)
Part I. Producing Precarious Status and Illegality in Canada
Chapter 2: The Museum of Illegal Immigration: Historical Perspectives on
the Production of Non-Citizens and Challenges to Immigration Controls -
Cynthia Wright (University of Toronto)
Chapter 3: The Shifting Landscape of Contemporary Canadian Immigration
Policy: The Rise of Temporary Migration and Employer-Driven Immigration -
Salimah Valiani (Ontario Nurses’ Association)
Chapter 4: The Canadian Temporary Foreign Worker Program: Regulations,
Practices and Protection Gaps - Delphine Nakache (University of Ottawa)
Part II. Precarious Status and Everyday Lives
Chapter 5: ‘This is my life:’ Youth Negotiating Legality and Belonging in
Toronto - Julie E.E. Young (York University)
Chapter 6: Constructing Coping Strategies: Migrants Seeking Stability in
Social Networks - Katherine Brasch (University of Toronto)
Chapter 7: The Cost of Invisibility: The Psychosocial Impact of Falling Out
of Status - Samia Saad (York University)
Chapter 8: The Social Production of Non-citizenship: Legal Transitions and
the Long Term Impacts of Precarious Status on Work - Patricia Landolt
(University of Toronto, Scarborough) and Luin Goldring (York University)
Chapter 9: Pathways to Precarity: Structural Vulnerabilities and Lived
Consequences for Migrant Farmworkers in Canada - Janet McLaughlin (Wilfrid
Laurier) and Jenna Hennebry (Wilfrid Laurier)
Chapter 10: Precarious Immigration Status and Precarious Housing Pathways:
Refugee Claimant Homelessness in Toronto and Vancouver - Priya Kissoon
(University of Toronto, Scarborough)
Part III. Institutional Negotiations of Membership and Rights
Chapter 11: Negotiating the Boundaries of Membership: Healthcare Providers,
Access to Social Goods and Immigration Status - Paloma Villegas (Ontario
Institute for Studies in Education at University of Toronto)
Chapter 12: “People’s Priorities Change when their Status Changes:”
Negotiating the Conditionality of Social Rights in Service Delivery to
Migrant Women - Rupaleem Bhuyan (University of Toronto)
Chapter 13: Getting to "Don’t Ask Don’t Tell" at the Toronto District
School Board: Mapping the Competing Discourses of Rights and Membership of
Institutional Stakeholders - Francisco Villegas (Ontario Institute for
Studies in Education at University of Toronto)
Chapter 14: No One Is Illegal Movements in Canada and the Negotiation of
Counter-national and Anti-colonial Struggles from Within the Nation-state -
Craig Fortier (York University)
Chapter 15: From Access to Empowerment: The Committee for Accessible AIDS
Treatment Experience Working with People Living with HIV-AIDS with
Precarious Status - Alan Li (Ontario HIV Treatment Network)
Chapter 16: Institutional Regulation of Research on Families and Legal
status: Negotiating Competing Notions of Risk in a Canadian University
Context - Julie E.E. Young (York University) and Judith K. Bernhard
(Ryerson University)
List of Tables
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1: Precarious Legal Status in Canada: Theorizing Non-citizenship
and Conditionality - Luin Goldring (York University) and Patricia Landolt
(University of Toronto, Scarborough)
Part I. Producing Precarious Status and Illegality in Canada
Chapter 2: The Museum of Illegal Immigration: Historical Perspectives on
the Production of Non-Citizens and Challenges to Immigration Controls -
Cynthia Wright (University of Toronto)
Chapter 3: The Shifting Landscape of Contemporary Canadian Immigration
Policy: The Rise of Temporary Migration and Employer-Driven Immigration -
Salimah Valiani (Ontario Nurses’ Association)
Chapter 4: The Canadian Temporary Foreign Worker Program: Regulations,
Practices and Protection Gaps - Delphine Nakache (University of Ottawa)
Part II. Precarious Status and Everyday Lives
Chapter 5: ‘This is my life:’ Youth Negotiating Legality and Belonging in
Toronto - Julie E.E. Young (York University)
Chapter 6: Constructing Coping Strategies: Migrants Seeking Stability in
Social Networks - Katherine Brasch (University of Toronto)
Chapter 7: The Cost of Invisibility: The Psychosocial Impact of Falling Out
of Status - Samia Saad (York University)
Chapter 8: The Social Production of Non-citizenship: Legal Transitions and
the Long Term Impacts of Precarious Status on Work - Patricia Landolt
(University of Toronto, Scarborough) and Luin Goldring (York University)
Chapter 9: Pathways to Precarity: Structural Vulnerabilities and Lived
Consequences for Migrant Farmworkers in Canada - Janet McLaughlin (Wilfrid
Laurier) and Jenna Hennebry (Wilfrid Laurier)
Chapter 10: Precarious Immigration Status and Precarious Housing Pathways:
Refugee Claimant Homelessness in Toronto and Vancouver - Priya Kissoon
(University of Toronto, Scarborough)
Part III. Institutional Negotiations of Membership and Rights
Chapter 11: Negotiating the Boundaries of Membership: Healthcare Providers,
Access to Social Goods and Immigration Status - Paloma Villegas (Ontario
Institute for Studies in Education at University of Toronto)
Chapter 12: “People’s Priorities Change when their Status Changes:”
Negotiating the Conditionality of Social Rights in Service Delivery to
Migrant Women - Rupaleem Bhuyan (University of Toronto)
Chapter 13: Getting to "Don’t Ask Don’t Tell" at the Toronto District
School Board: Mapping the Competing Discourses of Rights and Membership of
Institutional Stakeholders - Francisco Villegas (Ontario Institute for
Studies in Education at University of Toronto)
Chapter 14: No One Is Illegal Movements in Canada and the Negotiation of
Counter-national and Anti-colonial Struggles from Within the Nation-state -
Craig Fortier (York University)
Chapter 15: From Access to Empowerment: The Committee for Accessible AIDS
Treatment Experience Working with People Living with HIV-AIDS with
Precarious Status - Alan Li (Ontario HIV Treatment Network)
Chapter 16: Institutional Regulation of Research on Families and Legal
status: Negotiating Competing Notions of Risk in a Canadian University
Context - Julie E.E. Young (York University) and Judith K. Bernhard
(Ryerson University)