Vol. 97 (2026)
Articles

Social Support, Strain, and Surveillance: Peer Relationships and Representation among Migrant Farm Workers in Canada

Erika Borrelli
University of Windsor
Cover of Labour/Le Travail, Volume 97

Published 2026-05-19

Keywords

  • migrant farm workers,
  • precarious employment,
  • employment strain,
  • workplace representation,
  • lateral surveillance

How to Cite

Borrelli, E. (2026). Social Support, Strain, and Surveillance: Peer Relationships and Representation among Migrant Farm Workers in Canada. Labour Le Travail, 97, 41–68. https://doi.org/10.52975/llt.2026v97.003

Abstract

Workplace representation – the process through which workers voice concerns, negotiate conditions, and participate in decision-making – can be a crucial mechanism for reducing employment strain. Access to such structures is particularly vital for precarious workers, like temporary migrant farm workers in Canada, who face intensified demands owing to employer-tied contracts, congregate living arrangements, and persistent fears of job loss and deportation. Drawing on qualitative interviews and focus groups with migrant farm workers in three agriculturally dense regions in southern Ontario, this study explores the workers’ perceptions of one form of workplace representation: peer representation. While peer representation may foster lateral communication and social support for an otherwise isolated workforce, it is complicated by the structural precarity that intensifies competition and conflict among migrant farm workers. This article demonstrates how the conditions of entry and residency for migrant farm workers in Canada generate lateral surveillance and intra-worker control, amplifying workplace pressures and demands and reinforcing the strain that peer representation might otherwise help to alleviate.