Circular migration and misrecognition: the experience of spatial injustice of Moroccan women doing seasonal agricultural work in Huelva (Spain)
Language
en
Article de revue
This item was published in
Justice spatiale = Spatial justice. 2011-03, vol. 3, p. http://www.jssj.org/article/migrations-circulaires-et-deni-de-reconnaissance/
Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense, UMR LAVUE 7218, Laboratoire Mosaïques
English Abstract
This article explores seasonal Moroccan agricultural workers' who come to the Huelva province in southern Spain in the context of temporary contracts in origin. These contracts are aimed at women with family responsibilities, ...Read more >
This article explores seasonal Moroccan agricultural workers' who come to the Huelva province in southern Spain in the context of temporary contracts in origin. These contracts are aimed at women with family responsibilities, mostly married women with children, who are hired to pick fruit, strawberries in particular, in precarious conditions. Yet when interviewed, some of these women explained that the worst-case scenario they could imagine would be to be denied work in Spain. This article, drawing on theories of recognition and recent work in geography, casts light on the different forms of injustice they experience, and spatial injustice in particular.Read less <
English Keywords
circular migration
seasonal agricultural workers
recognition
injustice
contracts
Spatial justice
Origin
Hal importedCollections