2017
DOI: 10.7202/1040609ar
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Le retour au travail d’immigrants ayant subi une lésion professionnelle : les embûches de la rencontre interculturelle et la précarité du lien d’emploi

Abstract: Cet article rapporte une partie des résultats d'une étude exploratoire sur le processus de réadaptation et de retour au travail en contexte de relations interculturelles. Cette étude avait deux objectifs : identifier les stratégies mises de l'avant par les différents acteurs pour faciliter le processus de réadaptation et de retour au travail des travailleurs immigrants et décrire les contraintes, les obstacles et les aides au processus selon la perspective des différents… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…This study contributes to the scarce literature on the ways in which employers delegitimise the injury claims of precariously employed workers (Gravel et al, 2006 ;Gravel et al, 2017). In this study, employers challenged workers about whether the injury could be attributed to their workplace and described accidents as due to their own carelessness ("they are just a danger to themselves").…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…This study contributes to the scarce literature on the ways in which employers delegitimise the injury claims of precariously employed workers (Gravel et al, 2006 ;Gravel et al, 2017). In this study, employers challenged workers about whether the injury could be attributed to their workplace and described accidents as due to their own carelessness ("they are just a danger to themselves").…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…A number of studies also point to challenges at different stages of the compensation process for immigrant workers that may prolong seeking disability benefits and time off work for injury with implications for recovery, rehabilitation and return to work. These challenges are largely shaped by language barriers [33] and include under-reporting of work-related injuries [22,63,64] and waiting until injuries are more severe to seek compensation, the issue of injury attribution or having their claim recognized as work-related, especially if contested by employers resulting in claim denials and appeals [14,65,66], and provision of appropriate work accommodation [14,22]. The current findings suggest these labour market experiences, and their impacts may be differentially experienced by immigrants who arrive in Canada as refugees or family members; and that arriving in Canada via the economic classification may mitigate some of these experiences and impacts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gravel et al ( 77 ) investigate the motivation of migrant workers in the RTW process following WRI, based on a model of precarity ( 104 ), including job precarity (contract type), immigration-related precarity, professional precarity (non-recognition of previous work qualifications and experience) and economic precarity (unpaid overtime, low hourly wages regardless of qualifications, debts owed to recruiters/agents and overseas remittances). They conclude these dimensions of precarity may be potential determinants of a “symbolic break” with the RTW process, negatively influencing WRI experiences and outcomes ( 77 ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Analyses of worker compensation advisors’ views towards RTW following WRI, report the intertwining of age and gender identities as influencing older migrant women migrants' motivation to RTW following WRI ( 76 , 77 ). They suggest migrant women's identities as “self-assigned family caregivers” may take precedence over their identities as workers, negatively impacting motivation to RTW following WRI ( 76 , 77 ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%