- Date
- 2013 
- Auteurs
- Bob Barnetson et Jason Foster 
- Résumé
- Policy changes driven by Alberta’s oil boom of the 2000s have resulted in unprecedented growth in the use of foreign migrant workers. 
 At present, foreign migrant workers comprise as much as 8% of Alberta’s workforce. This paper
 explores why employers have dramatically increased their use of foreign migrant workers as well as
 how and why the government has supported employers in this effort. Alberta’s experience with
 temporary foreign workers (TFWs) suggests that growing reliance on foreign migrant labour appears to
 disempower both migrant and Canadian workers. Foreign migrant workers have limited ability to realize their rights due to employment precocity and social isolation
 .
 Canadian workers face competition from less
 expensive and more docile foreign migrant workers, thereby heightening the
 consequences of
 resisting
 employer demands
 .
 These outcomes are cons
 istent with the
 neoliberal prescription for restructuring the labour market, a prescription that Alberta’s
 oil
 -
 boom appears to have accelerated.
- Institution responsable
- Université de l'Alberta 
- Lieu de publication
- Edmonton 
- Fichiers joints
- Secteurs économiques
- General relevance - all sectors 
- Types de contenu
- Policy analysis et Numbers of migrant workers 
- Pertinence géographique
- Alberta 
- Langues
- Anglais 

