Vol. 97 (2026)
Articles

Deskilled and Degraded: The Interaction of Precarious Status and Precarious Employment Trajectories for Migrant Workers in Canada

Jason Foster
Athabasca University
Mylène Coderre
Concordia University
Giovanni Carranza-Hernandez
York University
Zainab Mahmood
University of New Brunswick
Cover of Labour/Le Travail, Volume 97

Published 2026-05-19

Keywords

  • Canada,
  • deskilling,
  • migrant workers,
  • precarious employment,
  • precarious status

How to Cite

Foster, J., Coderre, M., Carranza-Hernandez, G., & Mahmood, Z. (2026). Deskilled and Degraded: The Interaction of Precarious Status and Precarious Employment Trajectories for Migrant Workers in Canada. Labour Le Travail, 97, 69–100. https://doi.org/10.52975/llt.2026v97.004

Abstract

This research explores the intersection of precarious legal status and precarious employment of migrants who came to Canada with a temporary status, whether for work, study, or protection purposes. Drawing on data collected from 148 interviews with precarious-status migrants, the article investigates how transitions in status impact employment trajectories. It builds upon a mixed-method analysis, identifying how employment precarity intensifies with increased status insecurity, which results in progressive deskilling and the degradation of working conditions over time. By foregrounding deskilling as a cumulative and temporal process, this study demonstrates how Canada’s temporary migration regime systematically deteriorates migrant workers’ skills and opportunities, extending precarity beyond the immediate moment of employment. This analysis contributes to an understanding of the lived experiences of migrant workers, highlighting the long-term effects of migration policies and regulations on employment and working conditions.