Managed migrations : growers, farmworkers, and border enforcement in the twentieth century

書誌事項

Managed migrations : growers, farmworkers, and border enforcement in the twentieth century

Cristina Salinas

(Historia USA / edited by Luis Alvarez, Carlos Blanon, and Lorrin Thomas)

University of Texas Press, 2018

  • : cloth

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

2020 National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies (NACCS) Book Award Winner Honorable Mention, Ramirez Family Award for Most Significant Scholarly Book, Texas Institute of Letters, 2019 Managed Migrations examines the concurrent development of a border agricultural industry and changing methods of border enforcement in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas during the past century. Needed at one moment, scorned at others, Mexican agricultural workers have moved back and forth across the US-Mexico border for the past century. In South Texas, Anglo growers' dreams of creating a modern agricultural empire depended on continuous access to Mexican workers. While this access was officially regulated by immigration laws and policy promulgated in Washington, DC, in practice the migration of Mexican labor involved daily, on-the-ground negotiations among growers, workers, and the US Border Patrol. In a very real sense, these groups set the parameters of border enforcement policy. Managed Migrations examines the relationship between immigration laws and policy and the agricultural labor relations of growers and workers in South Texas and El Paso during the 1940s and 1950s. Cristina Salinas argues that immigration law was mainly enacted not in embassies or the halls of Congress but on the ground, as a result of daily decisions by the Border Patrol that growers and workers negotiated and contested. She describes how the INS devised techniques to facilitate high-volume yearly deportations and shows how the agency used these enforcement practices to manage the seasonal agricultural labor migration across the border. Her pioneering research reveals the great extent to which immigration policy was made at the local level, as well as the agency of Mexican farmworkers who managed to maintain their mobility and kinship networks despite the constraints of grower paternalism and enforcement actions by the Border Patrol.

目次

Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1. "Where Uncle Sam Meets Mexico": Narratives of Frontier and Progress in Early Twentieth-Century South Texas Chapter 2. The Social Space of Agriculture Chapter 3. The Flexible Border: Mobility within Restriction in US Immigration Laws and Enforcement Chapter 4. Exploitative Villain or Community Leader? Agricultural Labor Contractors, the State, and Control over Worker Mobility Chapter 5. El Paso/The Passage: The 1948 El Paso Incident and the Politics of Mobility Chapter 6. The High Price of Immigration Politics during the 1950s Epilogue Notes Bibliography Index

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関連文献: 1件中  1-1を表示

  • Historia USA

    edited by Luis Alvarez, Carlos Blanon, and Lorrin Thomas

    University of Texas Press

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