4.4 Editorial Material

COVID-19 violence and the structural determinants of death: Canada's seasonal agricultural worker programme

Journal

GLOBAL PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 17, Issue 5, Pages 784-793

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/17441692.2022.2053735

Keywords

Structural determinant of death; global health justice; migrant health; COVID-19 equity; necropolitics

Funding

  1. Canadian Social Science and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), Insight Development Award

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The Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program (SAWP) is a Canadian managed migration program that seeks to address labor shortages in the agricultural industry by employing Black and Brown workers from the global South. However, the operation of the SAWP during the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the structural violence experienced by migrant workers. This highlights how the SAWP, as a component of globalized labor processes, dehumanizes workers and renders them disposable, rooted in colonialism and racial capitalism.
The Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program (SAWP) is a managed migration programme that aims to fill labour shortages in Canada's agricultural industry with Black and Brown workers from the global South. For decades, migrant workers, scholars, and advocate groups have called for fundamental changes to address power imbalances produced by the design of the SAWP. The continued operation of the SAWP during the COVID-19 pandemic has intensified the underlying structural violence that migrant labourers experience. Analysing the SAWP as a case study in how globalised labour processes dehumanise and make workers disposable, we argue that it is one component in a web of social and structural factors rooted in colonialism and racial capitalism, constituting the structural determinants of death. Whereas the structural determinants of health point to health 'inequities' and 'disparities', we advance the concept of structural determinants of death to politicise the numerous and multidimensional forms of violence embedded within state policy and to shed light on their beneficiaries. In doing so, we detail how policies can diminish the agency necessary to avoid death in deadly conditions and, specifically, draw attention to the preventable suffering and death perpetuated by the SAWP.

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