Literature DB >> 21777125

Ethnicity, well-being, and the organization of labor among shade tobacco workers.

Michael Duke1.   

Abstract

The cultivation and processing of shade tobacco in the Connecticut River Valley (United States) is highly specialized and labor intensive and is dependent on a multi-ethnic workforce of migrant farm workers from Latin America and the West Indies. Production is structured through an ethnically reified division of labor, constituted by historical migration patterns, English language ability, and racially informed perceptions of what constitutes a "good worker." Regardless of position, these workers find themselves geographically and socially isolated and subjected to hazardous and exploitative working conditions. This article will explore the effects of these conditions on workers' physical and emotional well-being. Using Foucault's notion of governmentality, the article demonstrates the ways in which these deleterious effects are embedded in workers' internalizing of race and ethnicity as naturalizing principles for self-regulation and the organization of work and in neoliberal forces that produce a surplus of temporary, highly mobile workers from the global south.
Copyright © 2011 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21777125      PMCID: PMC3142346          DOI: 10.1080/01459740.2011.576727

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol        ISSN: 0145-9740


  4 in total

1.  Migrant farmworkers and green tobacco sickness: new issues for an understudied disease.

Authors:  S A Quandt; T A Arcury; J S Preisser; D Norton; C Austin
Journal:  Am J Ind Med       Date:  2000-03       Impact factor: 2.214

2.  The incidence of green tobacco sickness among Latino farmworkers.

Authors:  T A Arcury; S A Quandt; J S Preisser; D Norton
Journal:  J Occup Environ Med       Date:  2001-07       Impact factor: 2.162

3.  High levels of transdermal nicotine exposure produce green tobacco sickness in Latino farmworkers.

Authors:  Thomas A Arcury; Sara A Quandt; John S Preisser; John T Bernert; Deborah Norton; Joanna Wang
Journal:  Nicotine Tob Res       Date:  2003-06       Impact factor: 4.244

4.  [Migration and ruralization of AIDS: reports on vulnerability of indigenous communities in Mexico].

Authors:  Daniel Hernández-Rosete; Olivia Maya García; Enrique Bernal; Xóchitl Castañeda; George Lemp
Journal:  Rev Saude Publica       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 2.106

  4 in total
  2 in total

1.  "I Will Not Leave My Body Here": Migrant Farmworkers' Health and Safety Amidst a Climate of Coercion.

Authors:  C Susana Caxaj; Amy Cohen
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2019-07-24       Impact factor: 3.390

2.  Huichol Migrant Laborers and Pesticides: Structural Violence and Cultural Confounders.

Authors:  Jennie Gamlin
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2016-01-27
  2 in total

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