Racialized Immigrants In Canada's Changing Labour Market: An Investigation Of The Effects Of Precarious Work On Black Caribbean Women release_ukv7acmidnhydogm7smjydbtwu

by Maqueita Hibbert

Released as a post by Ryerson University Library and Archives.

2021  

Abstract

This research undertakes an examination of the employment opportunities and experiences of black Caribbean women in Canada, particularly within the context of the growing trend towards precarious jobs—casual, part-time and low paying—in the restructured Canadian labour market. The specific purview of this study is the labour history and employment experience of a representative group of black Caribbean women who work as Personal Support Workers in nursing homes across the Greater Toronto Area. A main concern of the study is to understand the ways in which precarious work affects these women's settlement and integration experiences, particularly their ability to gain economic independence; this, in turn, affects a number of variables related to their, and others, perception regarding their status and place in Canada. By focusing on the case of Personal Support Workers, the study aims to shed light not only on the employment experiences of black Caribbean women in this sector but also to examine more closely the policies and employment practices that create labour market "niches" or labour "segregation" along racial and gender lines.
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