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The Roots of Mexican Labor Migration

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Roots of Mexican Labor Migration

Contributors:

By (Author) Alexander V. Monto

ISBN:

9780275946302

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

28th February 1994

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Labour / income economics
Civics and citizenship
Sociology: work and labour

Dewey:

331.62720794

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

272

Description

Alexander Monto looks at how labor migration flows from Mexico to the United States are directed and structured, and what changes they bring in the sending and receiving communities. He places cyclical migration in the context of historical and economic developments in Mexico and the United States, and he concludes that the circulatory movement is an element in the well-established world economic system that has endured for a hundred years. Monto focuses on one Mexican town with high migrancy and on one of its migrants' main destinations, Salinas, California. He describes the network linking the two communities, which migrants use to maximize employment, minimize expenses, and return with the proceeds to Mexico, where they will be able to buy more. Monto finds that although macrosocial factors create the economic polarization that propels migration, the migrants are not merely pawns being pushed and pulled; instead, they use circulatory migration as one of several options selected according to their role in their domestic group and the group's particular needs. He concludes that this labor circulation is not a transitional phase bound to disappear when Mexico's workforce is converted to wage laborers, but a permanent, institutionalized component of Mexico's periphery-core relationship to the United States. In the next few years, predicts Monto, the proposed North American Free Trade Agreement, together with agricultural consolidation already underway in Mexico, will probably augment rather than reduce migration.

Author Bio

ALEXANDER MONTO is a Psychiatrist at the South County Mental Health Center and Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the University of California, San Francisco. He holds a Ph.D. in Social Anthropology from Cambridge University. Monto's study of the experiences of migrants to Salinas, California included eight months of fieldwork in a high-migrancy town in Michoacan, and a year elsewhere in Mexico.

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