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.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
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.
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)