加州大麻产业移民工人的结构性暴力和工资盗窃经验

IF 1.6 Q2 AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS & POLICY Journal of Agriculture Food Systems and Community Development Pub Date : 2023-06-01 DOI:10.5304/jafscd.2023.123.014
Stella Beckman, Xóchitl Castañeda, Vania del Rivero, Anaisabel Chavez, M. Schenker
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引用次数: 0

摘要

价值数十亿美元的加州大麻产业雇佣了数量不详的季节工,其中包括许多移民。大多数生产发生在偏远的农村,最北部的县,那里的农场距离最近的城镇可能有几个小时的车程。虽然在2016年加州将成人娱乐用途大麻合法化后,大麻种植许可证已经获得,但大多数大麻(约80%)仍在无照农场种植。大麻是一种劳动密集型作物,手工修剪花是该行业最常见的季节性工作。一些移民工人在多个大麻收获季节返回,他们对大麻文化和消费感兴趣,或者有机会在几个月内赚到足够的钱在本国度过一年中的其余时间,因此被吸引到这项工作中来。还有一些人是农场工人,他们从传统作物的工作转向收入相对较高的大麻产业。季节性大麻工人暴露于所有农业工作场所存在的许多身体危害,如灰尘、农药和伤害;加州传统农业劳动力的另一个共同点是容易受到种族、性别、移民身份和雇主/雇员权力不平衡等因素造成的结构性暴力的影响。大麻工人也受到这些结构性因素的独特影响,这些因素与大麻农场的孤立和偏远性质以及该行业正在被定罪有关。在这篇文章中,我们提出了对墨西哥和南美移民季节性大麻工人的职业健康和安全的定性研究结果,这些工人以前具有大麻行业特定的技能和经验。工作人员采用同行招聘的方式招募,25名参与者参加了三个在线焦点小组讨论,讨论了一系列职业健康和安全主题。这种定性描述性分析侧重于结构性暴力和工资盗窃的经验。
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Experiences of structural violence and wage theft among immigrant workers in the California cannabis industry
The multibillion-dollar California cannabis (Cannabis sativa, marijuana) industry employs an unknown number of seasonal workers, including many immigrants. Most production occurs in the remote, rural, far-northern counties where farms may be hours by vehicle from the nearest town. While licenses for cannabis cultivation became available following legalization in California for adult recreational use in 2016, most cannabis—about 80%—is still grown on unlicensed farms. Cannabis is a labor-intensive crop, and the skilled and time-consuming task of hand-trimming flow­ers is the most common seasonal job in the indus­try. Some immigrant workers return for multiple cannabis harvest seasons and are attracted to the work by an interest in the cannabis culture and consumption or the opportunity to earn enough money in several months to live the rest of the year in their home country. Others are farmworkers moving from work in traditional crops for the rela­tively higher pay in the cannabis industry. Seasonal cannabis workers are exposed to many of the phys­ical hazards found in all agricultural workplaces, like dust, pesticides, and injuries; another common­ality with California’s traditional agricultural work­force is vulnerability to structural violence stem­ming from factors related to race, gender, immigra­tion status, and employer/employee power imbal­ance. Cannabis workers are also uniquely affected by the intersections of these structural fac­tors with the isolated and remote nature of canna­bis farms and the ongoing criminalization of the industry. In this article we present the results of a qualitative study of the occupational health and safety of Mexican and South American immigrant seasonal cannabis workers who have previous can­nabis-industry-specific skills and experience. Work­ers were recruited using a peer-recruitment method, with 25 participants in three online focus group discussions on a range of occupational health and safety topics. This qualitative descriptive analysis is focused on experiences of structural vio­lence and wage theft.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
73
审稿时长
15 weeks
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