Everybody wants to make money from them: a qualitative study on labor exploitation and labor trafficking of farmworkers in Michigan

Abstract Introduction Fair work conditions are essential for promoting health among workers, communities, and society. Yet, historically farmworkers have been impacted by precarious and exploitative work conditions. Given the scarce research in Michigan with farmworkers, in 2019 we developed the Mic...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lisbeth Iglesias-Rios, Alexis J. Handal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2025-07-01
Series:Discover Social Science and Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s44155-025-00258-6
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849389331984154624
author Lisbeth Iglesias-Rios
Alexis J. Handal
author_facet Lisbeth Iglesias-Rios
Alexis J. Handal
author_sort Lisbeth Iglesias-Rios
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Introduction Fair work conditions are essential for promoting health among workers, communities, and society. Yet, historically farmworkers have been impacted by precarious and exploitative work conditions. Given the scarce research in Michigan with farmworkers, in 2019 we developed the Michigan Farmworker Project (MFP), guided by community-based participatory principles and in partnership with state and local organizations. This study assesses qualitative data collected from the first study of the MFP, specifically perceptions, knowledge, and experiences related to exploitative work and labor trafficking. Method We employed a framework analysis approach with 56 in-depth interviews with farmworkers (migrant, seasonal, H-2 A) and stakeholders from different service areas (social, educational, health care, legal and outreach) in Michigan. Finding Findings show the following emergent themes: (1) deceptive recruitment, (2) abuse of worker social vulnerability, (3) exploitative and hazardous work conditions, (4) coercion and threats, (5) wage theft, (6) document retention, (7) isolation and employer control, (8) confinement and physical and sexual violence, (9) experiences and perceptions of labor trafficking, and (10) fragmented systems and policy failures, underscoring the need for integrated federal, state and local regulatory responses to anti-trafficking efforts. Conclusion Exploitation of workers can be prevented by an independent regulatory body that enforces accountability and transparency from employers throughout the employment process. Federal and state level efforts on policies that promote decent and fair employment are sustainable development goals needed to address labor exploitation.
format Article
id doaj-art-6f8319c6f72046aa88e4e118e2a147e2
institution Kabale University
issn 2731-0469
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher Springer
record_format Article
series Discover Social Science and Health
spelling doaj-art-6f8319c6f72046aa88e4e118e2a147e22025-08-20T03:42:00ZengSpringerDiscover Social Science and Health2731-04692025-07-015111010.1007/s44155-025-00258-6Everybody wants to make money from them: a qualitative study on labor exploitation and labor trafficking of farmworkers in MichiganLisbeth Iglesias-Rios0Alexis J. Handal1Department of Epidemiology, University of MichiganDepartment of Epidemiology, University of MichiganAbstract Introduction Fair work conditions are essential for promoting health among workers, communities, and society. Yet, historically farmworkers have been impacted by precarious and exploitative work conditions. Given the scarce research in Michigan with farmworkers, in 2019 we developed the Michigan Farmworker Project (MFP), guided by community-based participatory principles and in partnership with state and local organizations. This study assesses qualitative data collected from the first study of the MFP, specifically perceptions, knowledge, and experiences related to exploitative work and labor trafficking. Method We employed a framework analysis approach with 56 in-depth interviews with farmworkers (migrant, seasonal, H-2 A) and stakeholders from different service areas (social, educational, health care, legal and outreach) in Michigan. Finding Findings show the following emergent themes: (1) deceptive recruitment, (2) abuse of worker social vulnerability, (3) exploitative and hazardous work conditions, (4) coercion and threats, (5) wage theft, (6) document retention, (7) isolation and employer control, (8) confinement and physical and sexual violence, (9) experiences and perceptions of labor trafficking, and (10) fragmented systems and policy failures, underscoring the need for integrated federal, state and local regulatory responses to anti-trafficking efforts. Conclusion Exploitation of workers can be prevented by an independent regulatory body that enforces accountability and transparency from employers throughout the employment process. Federal and state level efforts on policies that promote decent and fair employment are sustainable development goals needed to address labor exploitation.https://doi.org/10.1007/s44155-025-00258-6CBPRFarmworkersLabor traffickingQualitative research
spellingShingle Lisbeth Iglesias-Rios
Alexis J. Handal
Everybody wants to make money from them: a qualitative study on labor exploitation and labor trafficking of farmworkers in Michigan
Discover Social Science and Health
CBPR
Farmworkers
Labor trafficking
Qualitative research
title Everybody wants to make money from them: a qualitative study on labor exploitation and labor trafficking of farmworkers in Michigan
title_full Everybody wants to make money from them: a qualitative study on labor exploitation and labor trafficking of farmworkers in Michigan
title_fullStr Everybody wants to make money from them: a qualitative study on labor exploitation and labor trafficking of farmworkers in Michigan
title_full_unstemmed Everybody wants to make money from them: a qualitative study on labor exploitation and labor trafficking of farmworkers in Michigan
title_short Everybody wants to make money from them: a qualitative study on labor exploitation and labor trafficking of farmworkers in Michigan
title_sort everybody wants to make money from them a qualitative study on labor exploitation and labor trafficking of farmworkers in michigan
topic CBPR
Farmworkers
Labor trafficking
Qualitative research
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s44155-025-00258-6
work_keys_str_mv AT lisbethiglesiasrios everybodywantstomakemoneyfromthemaqualitativestudyonlaborexploitationandlabortraffickingoffarmworkersinmichigan
AT alexisjhandal everybodywantstomakemoneyfromthemaqualitativestudyonlaborexploitationandlabortraffickingoffarmworkersinmichigan