Journal
INTERNATIONAL LABOUR REVIEW
Volume 161, Issue 2, Pages 245-266Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ilr.12348
Keywords
refugee labour; agriculture; Middle East; legal ambiguity; food insecurity; COVID-19
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Drawing on ethnographic data, this article examines the early effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on refugee labor in agriculture in Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, and Turkey. Findings show that movement restrictions and supply chain disruptions have led to job losses and increased food insecurity for displaced Syrian farmworkers. The authors argue that formalizing refugee labor alone is insufficient to address exploitation.
Drawing on ethnographic data from the 2019 SyrianFoodFutures and the 2020 From the FIELD projects, this article provides insights into the early effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on refugee labour in agriculture in Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and Turkey. In spring 2020, movement restrictions and supply chain disruptions caused displaced Syrian farmworkers to lose their jobs and face increased food insecurity. The authors situate their findings in the context of host countries' use of legal ambiguity in governing refugees, Middle Eastern agriculture's reliance on migrant labour, and the region's long-standing food insecurity. They conclude that formalizing refugee labour cannot alone address exploitation.
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