“If I feel like I am in danger, I leave”: pesticide exposure, agentic strategies, and gender among Latine farmworkers in Idaho

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Pesticide exposure is a common occupational hazard for Latine farmworkers laboring in the United States, causing harm to farmworkers’ wellbeing and the wellbeing of their families and communities. While existing scholarly literature documents various issues related to occupational pesticide exposure for farmworkers, limited research has centered on farmworkers’ voices to understand their views on pesticides, including the degree to which they express or experience a sense of agency in managing pesticide exposure. This paper outlines key findings from mixed methods research conducted throughout 2022 focused on pesticide beliefs and exposure among Latine farmworkers in Southwestern Idaho. Drawing from survey and interview data, we focus on findings related to the following questions: Do farmworkers believe they have agency in protecting themselves from pesticides? What strategies do farmworkers use to protect themselves from pesticides in their agricultural work? What factors limit or facilitate farmworkers engaging in agentic acts as they work to protect themselves from pesticides? We further consider these questions through a lens of gender, utilizing concepts of carework, hegemonic masculinity, and familism to frame how gender and intersectional factors may shape the degree to which and the ways in which agency is expressed and enacted by farmworkers in their agricultural labor.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAgriculture and Human Values
Early online date22 May 2025
DOIs
StateE-pub ahead of print - 22 May 2025

Keywords

  • Agency
  • Carework
  • Farmworkers
  • Gender
  • Labor

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