Ir al menú de navegación principal Ir al contenido principal Ir al pie de página del sitio

Artículos

Vol. 6 Núm. 20 (2011): enero-junio, 2011

New Migration Stream between Mexico and Canada

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17428/rmi.v6i20.1062
Publicado
2017-05-23

Resumen

Data from the Mexican Migration Project is used to contrast processes of Mexican migration to Canada and the United States. All migrants to Canada entered through the Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program and migration there is strongly predicted by marital status and number of dependents. Conversely, most migrants to the United States are undocumented and thus self selected without regard to marital status or parenthood.Migrants to Canada enjoy superior labor market outcomes with higher wages and more compact work schedules that yield higher earnings and shorter periods away from families. Labor migration to Canada also tends to operate as a circular flow with considerable repeat migration whereas undocumented migrants to the United States tend to stay longer, since crossing the Mexico-U.S. border has become increasingly difficult.ResumenEn este artículo se comparan los flujos migratorios de México a Canadá y Estados Unidos, con base en datos del Proyecto de Migración Mexicana (mmp), según el cual los inmigrantes que llegaron a Canadá entraron a través del Programa de Trabajadores Agrícolas Temporales. En correspondencia con los criterios de este programa, se trata de una población mayoritariamente masculina, casada y con dependientes. En contraste, la mayoría de los inmigrantes a Estados Unidos son indocumentados y, por ende, autoseleccionados, de manera que el estado civil o número de hijos es irrelevante.En comparación con Estados Unidos, en Canadá los inmigrantes disfrutan de mejores salarios y jornadas laborales más compactas, lo que se refleja en mayores ganancias y menos tiempo alejados de sus familias. La migración laboral a Canadá tiende a una mayor circularidad, mientras que los inmigrantes en Estados Unidos posponen su retorno debido al incremento en la dificultad del cruce fronterizo.

Imagen de portada

Palabras clave

  • emigration
  • labor migration
  • Mexico
  • Canada
  • United States. Nuevo flujo migratorio entre México y Canadá

Cómo citar

Massey, D. S., & Brown, A. E. (2017). New Migration Stream between Mexico and Canada. Migraciones Internacionales, 6(20), 199–144. https://doi.org/10.17428/rmi.v6i20.1062

Citas

  1. Aldrete Valencia, Hernán, 2006, Presentation on Mexico­Canada Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program at the Unitar/unfpa/ iom/ilo Workshop on Labour Migration, March 15.
  2. Basok, Tanya, 2000, “Migration of Mexican Seasonal Farm Workers to Canada and Development: Obstacles to Produc­ tive Investment”, International Migration Review, num. 34, pp. 79­-97.
  3. Basok, Tanya, 2002, Tortillas and Tomatoes: Transmigrant Mexi- can Harvesters in Canada, Montreal/Kingston, McGill­Queen’s University Press.
  4. Basok, Tanya, 2003, “Mexican Seasonal Migration to Canada and Development: A Community­Based Comparison”, Inter- national Migration, num. 41, pp. 3­26.
  5. Basok, Tanya, 2004, “Post­national Citizenship, Social Exclusion and Migrants Rights: Mexican Seasonal Workers in Canada”, Citizenship Studies, num. 8, pp. 47­64.
  6. Binford, Leigh et al., 2004, Rumbo a Canadá: La migración cana- diense de trabajadores agrícolas tlaxcaltecas, México, D. F., Edi­ ciones Taller Abierto.
  7. Binford, Leigh, 2006, The Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program and Mexican Development, Ottawa, The Canadian Foundation for the Americas (focal).
  8. Canada-­Mexico Partnership, 2008, “Annual Report 2007­2008”, Government of Mexico/Government of Canada”. Available at <http://www.canadainternational.gc.ca/mexico­mexique/assets/ pdfs/CMPreport­rappor08.pdf> (last accessed on July 6, 2009).
  9. Citizenship and Immigration Canada, 2006, “Foreign Workers Overview”, The Monitor, first and second quarter. Available at <http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resources/statistics/monitor/ issue14/05­overview.asp> (last accessed on July 7, 2009).
  10. Citizenship and Immigration Canada, 2008, Facts and Figures 2007, Ottawa, Citizenship and Immigration Canada. Avail­able at <http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resources/statistics/ menu­fact.asp> (last accessed on July 7, 2009).
  11. Coordinación General de Empleo, 2006, Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program Mexico-Canada, 1974-2006, Secretaría del Trabajo y Previsión Social, Subsecretaría de Empleo y Polí­ tica Laboral. Available at <http://www.unitarny.org/mm/File/H.A.%20Valencia%20SAWP%20Mexico­Canada.pdf> (last accessed on July 6, 2009).
  12. Durand, Jorge and Douglas S. Massey, 2001, Milagros en la fron- tera: Retablos de migrantes mexicanos a Estados Unidos (Spanish edition of Miracles on the Border), México, El Colegio de San Luis/Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en An­tropología Social.
  13. Durand, Jorge and Douglas S. Massey, 2003, Clandestinos: Migración México-Estados Unidos en los albores del siglo XXI. Méxi­co, D. F., Miguel Ángel Porrúa .
  14. Durand, Jorge and Douglas S. Massey, 2004, Crossing the Border:
  15. Research from the Mexican Migration Project, New York, RussellSage Foundation.
  16. Dwyer, Augusta, 2008, “Ottawa Looks to Mexico to Ease La­bour Crunch”, The Globe and Mail. Available at http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report­on­business/ottawa­looks­to­ mexico­to­ease­labour­crunch/article686937/> (last accessed on July, 2009).
  17. Gibb, Heather, 2006, Farmworkers from Afar: Results from an International Study of Seasonal Farmworkers from Mexico and the Caribbean Working on Ontario Farms, Ottawa, The North­ South Institute.
  18. Goździak, Elżbieta M. and Susan F. Martin, 2005, Beyond the Gateway: Immigrants in a Changing America, Lanham, Mary­ land, Lexington Books.
  19. Hennebry, Jenna L., 2008, “Bienvenidos a Canadá? Globalization and the Migration Industry Surrounding Temporary Agricul­ tural Migration in Canada”, Canadian Studies in Population, num, 35, pp. 339­356.
  20. Human Resources and Skills Development Canada, 2009, Sea- sonal Agricultural Worker Program. Available at (last accessed on July 6, 2009).
  21. Light, Ivan, 2006, Deflecting Immigration: Networks, Markets, and Regulation in Los Angeles, New York, Russell Sage Foundation.
  22. Massey, Douglas S., 1987, “Understanding Mexican Migration to the United States”, American Journal of Sociology, num. 92, pp. 1372­1403.
  23. Massey, Douglas S., 2008, New Faces in New Places: The New Geography of American Immigration, New York, Russell Sage Foundation.
  24. Massey, Douglas S. and Chiara Capoferro, 2008, “The Geo­ graphic Diversification of U.S. Immigration”, in Douglas S. Massey (ed.), New Faces in New Places: The Changing Geogra- phy of American Immigration, New York, Russell Sage Founda­ tion, pp. 25­50.
  25. Massey, Douglas S. and Julie A. Phillips, 1999, “Engines of Im­ migration: Stocks of Human and Social Capital in Mexico”, Social Science Quarterly, num. 81, pp. 33­48.
  26. Massey, Douglas S. and Kristin E. Espinosa, 1997, “What’s Driv­ ing Mexico­US Migration? A Theoretical, Empirical, and Pol­ icy Analysis”, The American Journal of Sociology, num. 102, pp. 939­999.
  27. Massey, Douglas S., Jorge Durand, and Nolan J. Malone, 2002,
  28. Beyond Smoke and Mirrors: Mexican Immigration in an Age of
  29. Economic Integration, New York, Russell Sage Foundation. Massey, Douglas S., Karen A. Pren and Jorge Durand, 2009, “Nuevos escenarios de la migración México­Estados Unidos. Las consecuencias de la guerra antiinmigrante”, Papeles de Población, vol. 15, num. 61, pp. 101­-128.
  30. Montoya Zepeda, Iván, 2005, “Programa de trabajadores agríco­ las mexicanos de temporada en Canadá: Funcionamiento e im­ plicaciones de un mercado laboral agrícola estacional”, Master’s thesis in population, Mexico, Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales.
  31. Mysyk, Avis, 2000, Manitoba Commercial Market Gardening, 1945-1997: Class, Race, and Ethnic Relations. Regina, Univer­sity of Regina, Canadian Plains Research Centre.
  32. Portes, Alejandro, 2007, “Un diálogo Norte­Sur: El progreso de la teoría en el estudio de la migración internacional y sus implica­ ciones”, in Marina Ariza and Alejandro Portes (coords.), El país transnacional: Migración mexicana y cambio social a través de la frontera, México, D. F., unam, iis, pp. 651-­702.
  33. Preibisch, Kerry L., 2007, “Local Produce, Foreign Labour: La­ bour Mobility Programs and Global Trade Competitiveness in Canada”, Rural Sociology, num. 72, pp. 418­449.
  34. Ruddick, Elizabeth, 2004, Presentation on Canada’s Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program at the iom/wto/World Bank Seminar on Managing Trade and Migration, Geneva, Octo­ber 4­-5.
  35. Satzewich, Vic, 1991, Racism and the Incorporation of Foreign Labour: Farm Labour Migration to Canada since 1945, New York,Routledge.
  36. Singer, Audrey, Susan W. Hardwick and Caroline B. Brettell,
  37. , Twenty-First Gentury Gateways: Immigrant Incorpora- tion in Suburban America, Washington, DC, Brookings Insti­ tution Press.
  38. Statistics Canada, 2009, “Immigrant Population by Place of Birth and Period of Immigration”. Available at (last accessed on May 24, 2010).
  39. Trejo García, Elma del Carmen and Margarita Álvarez Romero, 2007, Programa de Trabajadores Agrícolas Temporales México- Canadá (ptat), Subdirección de Política Exterior, Servicio de Investigación y Análisis/lx Legislatura. spe­iss­ci­15­07.
  40. Verduzco, Gustavo, and Maria Isabel Lozano, 2003, Mexican Farmworkers’ Participation in Canada’s Seasonal Agricultural Labour Market and Development Consequences in their Rural Home Communities”, Ottawa, North­South Institute.
  41. Zúñiga, Víctor, and Rubén Hernández­León, 2005, New Desti- nations: Mexican Immigration in the United States, New York, Russell Sage Foundation.

Artículos similares

<< < 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 > >> 

También puede {advancedSearchLink} para este artículo.