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Book Review: Maquiladoras and Migration
In: International migration review: IMR, Band 18, Heft 2, S. 328-329
ISSN: 1747-7379, 0197-9183
Maquiladoras and Migration
In: International migration review: IMR, Band 18, Heft 2, S. 328-329
ISSN: 0197-9183
Patterns of migration to the United States from two Mexican communities
In: Latin American research review: LARR ; the journal of the Latin American Studies Association (LASA), Band 20, Heft 2, S. 104-123
ISSN: 0023-8791
World Affairs Online
Patterns of Migration to the United States from two Mexican Communities
In: Latin American research review, Band 20, Heft 2, S. 104-123
ISSN: 1542-4278
Economists have long recognized the importance of migration between less developed and more developed countries, and they have devoted considerable attention to analyzing it within the framework of traditional economic theory (Thomas 1954; Kindleberger 1967; Tapinos 1974; Greenwood 1979; Chiswick 1980; Wachter 1980; Stark 1983). But international migration entails not only an economic exchange of work for wages, it is also fundamentally a social process. Repeated human contact inevitably produces ties between persons in sending and receiving societies. Social networks are created that connect individuals in disparate cultural settings, and these ties ultimately change the context within which economic processes are played out. Understanding how such ties develop and change over time is therefore crucial to understanding the phenomenon of international migration.
New Migrants vs. Old Migrants: Alternative Labor Market Structures in the California Citrus Industry
Based on fieldwork conducted during 1981 in Ventura County, California, this study helps to explain the relationship between the relative abundance of Mexican nationals willing to pick citrus crops and the institutional forms which U.S. unions, employers, and governments have created to deal with Mexicans in California agriculture. The work should be of particular relevance to those interested in the mechanisms through which Mexican nationals enter U.S. jobs and in the impact that immigrants have on the work opportunities available to U.S. nationals. The authors, a labor economist and an historian, utilized a combination of personal interviews, documentary research, and economic analysis to examine competition by Mexican migrants for jobs in the California citrus industry. Their research revealed that this competition—which has recently undermined attempts to stabilize the harvest labor market—involves virtually no U.S.-born workers. Rather, new waves of young, economically and legally vulnerable Mexican migrants have displaced older, more secure Mexicans who had won higher wages, improved benefits, and increased job security. The citrus industry in Ventura County combined several factors, unusual in agriculture, that would allow for improved conditions of employment—a long picking season, a predominantly settled labor force, and institutional arrangements aimed at stabilization. The entrance of new subgroups of Mexican migrants with distinct characteristics, however, has resulted in the fragmentation of the labor market into distinct sectors with different working conditions and employee benefits. The authors' analysis thus reveals that underlying historical forces—especially a persistently abundant supply of labor—have tended to reverse the progress earlier achieved through the creation of institutions to improve the quality of life for harvest workers in the citrus industry.
BASE
Developing a community tradition of migration to the United States: a field study in rural Zacatecas, Mexico, and California settlement areas
In: Monographs in U.S.-Mexican studies 3
The Latinization of U.S. Farm Labor
In: Report on the Americas, Band 26, Heft 1, S. 42-47
Maquiladoras and Migration
In: International migration review: IMR, Band 18, Heft 2, S. 328
ISSN: 1747-7379, 0197-9183