Saturday 29 February 2020

Salamanca Cardona and Choudry (2019) Activist Learning and Temporary Agency Workers in Quebec


Salamanca Cardona, M., and Choudry, A. 2019. “Activist Learning and Temporary Agency Workers in Quebec.” In Ramdeholl, D. (Ed.). New Directions For Adult and Continuing Education, Understanding Social Justice: Learning and Movements in Adult Education 164 (Winter), 37-48.

Activist Learning and Temporary Agency Workers in Quebec


First published: 29 December 2019
 

Abstract


This chapter addresses learning and nonformal education in the course of organizing migrant and immigrant (im/migrant) temporary agency workers through the Immigrant Workers Centre (IWC) and the Temporary Agency Workers Association (TAWA) in Montreal. The IWC/TAWA organizing approach with agency workers is based on community organizing, activist knowledge production, popular education, and leadership development. Activist education work has helped to foster sustained organizing and campaigns against exploitation by temp agencies in Quebec. This has led to important gains like a recently adopted law that includes several provisions to regulate agencies. We build on critical ethnographic activist research, radical adult education literature concerning social movements, and apply Freire's concepts of limit situations and untested feasibility to TAWA/IWC organizing approaches. We argue that precarious work entails both vulnerability and resistance, and suggest that researchers should attend to the role of activist education, learning, and knowledge production to better understand social and economic justice struggles.