Immigration
1. Who is more likely to go from Mexico to the U.S to work – rural or urban citizens? Why?
Rural citizens are more likely to go from Mexico to the United States to work because they are poor, and lack labor opportunities. Additionally, these citizens go to the United States in hopes of earning more money to provide a better life for their families.
2. How has NAFTA affected Mexican farmers?
NAFTA has affected Mexican farmers in a negative way, causing a lot of farms and agriculture to be shut down. Further, NAFTA has caused agriculture from the United States to be cheaper, which means that there is no benefit in farming from Mexico. Moreover, NAFTA did benefit the avocado industry. NAFTA has made it harder for Mexican farmers to compete with the U.S.
3. What do the Mexican citizens interviewed in the film say about their government?
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Since government does not support citizens, some of them have to migrate to the U.S to make more money due to debt piling up. Additionally, the citizens say that the government do not support farms, nor does the government tell citizens about funding available for certain programs and businesses. The citizens even say that the government takes advantage of those who are uneducated, and that they depend on the U.S rather than their own government.
4. What are the two top sources of money coming into Mexico? What is the third?
Two top sources of money coming into Mexico is oil export, and tourism. The third top source of money coming into Mexico is money being sent back to families. Some men cross the border to the U.S to make some extra cash in order to help their families back home live a better life.
5. How does emigration to the U.S. affect Mexican
The Struggle for Labor Rights on Mexican Maquiladoras María Eugenia de la O Introduction The 1960s, hundreds of foreign assembly factories were established along the Mexico-United States border cities as a result of increasing labor force costs in industrialized nations, and also as an economic strategy of the Mexican government who provided tax incentives, infrastructure and low wages to the new investors. Decades after, in the 1990s, Mexico, Canada and United States signed the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), consequently thousands of factories -call maquiladoras- be transformed into an important source of foreign investment and jobs to Mexico. Currently there are thousands of maquiladoras in the nation; according to recent
As other industries when to bankrupt, maquiladoras profited. NAFTA, which is the North American Free Trade Agreement, contributed to the expansion of the maquiladora industries in the early 1990s resulting in an increase in the maquiladora job market. When American companies started to set up in large numbers, multi-party democracies began to dominate the northern part of Mexico. With the additional influence of American ideals, Mexico’s maquiladoras have strengthened both cities. In the midst of the early 1990s and early 2000s, the growth between that time span for maquiladoras had an annual average rate of 10%.
What positive changes do you think happened for the Mexican people after NAFTA? A. job opportunities became available for thousands of people, the economy drastically grew, to this day the state of Chihuahua can be named one of the most prosperous states in the Republic of Mexico. 5. What negative changes did you notice happened in
A lot of immigrants were recruited by farm owners to work for them on their farms and lands. Many of these Mexicans also worked in non-agricultural jobs, such as factories and other shops. When the Great Depression
They seemed committed to improving conditions for the braceros. However, though it looked good in theory, Public Law 78 held no penalties for employers who hired undocumented workers. Because of this, many American farmers were
I, Jacob Patterson, am choosing to run my gubernatorial campaign on the platform of restricting the amount of foreign legal immigration into the state of Texas. Why restrict the amount of immigration into the Lone Star state? Well if you ask me there are actually three main reasons, those are: jobs, security, and defending america 's culture. Countless legal loopholes currently reside in our country 's legal immigration laws and many states simply don’t abide by the statutes currently implemented in the Immigration Act of 1990. As Texans it 's our duty to protect and secure our border as a part of national security.
Rossul was an Iraq teen born in Iraq and went to Turkey and Jordon and finally to the United States because his country was in danger and there wasn’t much food or water and wasn’t safe. 2. What are some of the reasons why migrant or refugee youth leave their home countries to come to the U.S.? Refuges or people come to this country for a better life because the there country may be in war or economic crises or lack of food and water also because their homes could have been taken or destroyed. 3.
Similar to the industrial revolution, Mexicans moved into America during a major world transition, World War I. After the U.S.A. joined the war in Europe, there was a shortage of men to work in America. The people in America welcomed the Mexican immigrants to work in the factories and farms throughout America (Mexican Immigration, n.d.). Then in 1939, World War II began and once again there was a shortage of labor in the United States. Mexicans began to flow into America again searching for work.
Farm and ranch working has always been around and cheaply available by, migrant workers during the Great Depression and now with immigrants trying to get hired at the farms. Now while the times of both are different with migrant workers existing around the 1930s and the modern immigrants from Mexico, both jobs they get hired at show many similarities. In farms from the 1930s they often picked up desperate workers for cheap pay, as for now it isn't much different. Immigrants who successfully crossed the Mexican borders without getting caught by border control are often hired at farms and ranches. With the measly pay the immigrants receive, the can hardly afford paying a babysitter to care for their children.
These are some of the questions I asked for my research. Overall, both the academic books, peer-reviewed articles and interviews will help me discuss and share the importance of Mexican immigrants in the Los Angeles economy. These methodological approaches serve as a demonstration as to why Mexican immigrants are an important group to the US and Los Angeles
Much of the economic sector within the community is agricultural based. Many Mexican-American in the early 20th century were braceros and vaqueros. Vikki Ruiz mention the Economic status of Mexicans, and states, “Pushed by the economic and political chaos generated by the Mexican Revolution and lured by jobs in U.S. agribusiness and industry, they settled into existing barrios and forged new communities both in the Southwest and the Midwest” (Ruiz, p.265). these communities were build on the economic opportunity available of migration.
In the present times, illegal immigration has been one significant challenge that America and other countries have been facing. Some critics hold that immigrants have been part of sustaining the economy in America while others hold that America has paid a great price for allowing the immigrants to the country. In such a controversial issue, politicians keep on giving their comments with general perceptions; however, from economists handle this challenge with rational arguments of economics and anticipate the net result. Texas, being the biggest borderline state to Mexico, has been significantly impacted by immigrants. Illegal immigration is explained as the act of moving to another country for the purpose of employment, permanent settlement
Que Vivan Los Tamales analyses the history of Mexico's evolving national identity via food. Mexican cuisine has changed dramatically from the the era of the aztecs, to the period of Spanish colonialism through to the Porfiriato dictatorship. Through these periods we we see food being used in a manner to unify the nation and create a national united identity. Below I will argue how the country attempted to unify its people though cuisine. When the Spanish conquered Mexico, they tried to impose old world techniques and spices onto the Mexicans.
The Mexican American population is comprised of a myriad of different statuses. Many families have resided in this area since Spanish American first began to migrate and settle here. The lower class arrived in Texas along with Indian and Mexican immigrants to go to work on a Spanish ranch. Others more recently attained their status as citizens here after migrating from Mexico to the United States.
NAFTA took effect in January of 1994.Its main purpose is to increase the agriculture trade and investment among the three countries. According to the department of agriculture, Mexico lost over 900,000 farming jobs in the first decade of NAFTA. ( McKenzie, 2015 ). Before NAFTA people of Mexico grew corn and was able to support their family and country economy. Shortly after NAFTA cheap American corn came pouring in form the borders, which caused a major effect on families that were working in farms in Mexico.