The mainstream research on migrant workers' health adopts the perspective of disease prevention and management, which regards migrant workers as the subject of governance. The approach pays little attention to social infrastructures and institutional arrangements that shape their health experiences. Relying upon qualitative interviews, this study adopts the approach of structural vulnerability to examine how the intersectionality of political-economic, cultural, and psychodynamic factors affects migrant fishermen's working and health experiences in their everyday life. The research findings point out that, in the transnational context, the institutional arrangements embedded in the migration regime and labor regime impact migrant fishermen's working conditions and environment, occupational hazards, and health. Using migrant fishermen's daily experiences as the entry point of the investigation, first, this research aims to enrich the analytical approach to migrant workers' health; second, extended from the current studies, this research hopes to provide further understanding of migrant fishermen's situations and experiences.
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