The Chicken Trail: Following Workers, Migrants, and Corporations across the Americas
Penulis
: Kathleen C. Schwartzman
Subyek
: Chicken industry—United States, Chicken industry—Mexico, Foreign workers, Mexican—United States, Unemployment—
United States, Unemployment—Mexico, United States—
Emigration and immigration, Mexico—Emigration and immigration, United States—Commerce—Mexico
Penerbit
: Cornell University Press, ILR Press
Ringkasan :The relationship between immigration and unemployment has become
a particularly controversial topic in the United States. This book is about
immigration and unemployment, but it is also about bi-national business
restructuring and bi-national labor reorganization. The Chicken Trail ties
them together. I have two goals in writing this book: fi rst, to outline and
analyze the causes and consequences of immigration; and second, to dispel
some of the common beliefs about immigration by replacing them with
a more historically nuanced sociological analysis. While I do not directly
engage the current debate, I offer an alternative framework for understanding
the perplexing realities of immigration. This I take to be the sociological
mandate: to offer an analysis of how society works and to refl ect
on policy options. My hope is that those concerned with policy as well as
students will fi nd it useful.
I use metaphor of the chicken trail to investigate highly important patterns
and transitions that affect America and the entire world. My framework
folds the immigration story into the ongoing processes of U.S. and Mexico labor reorganization and displacement, which it then connects to
global transformations. The labor displacement and immigration stories
become part of a twenty-fi rst-century “Global Dilemma” and “American
Dilemma.” The Global Dilemma is that in developing nations, as rural survival
continues to be undermined by international trade, people attempt to
alleviate their poverty by abandoning fi rst the countryside and then their
country. The American Dilemma is that economic transformations have
left the United States with jobs that “nobody wants,” jobs that are shipped
overseas, and jobs for which American workers are unqualifi ed.
This book materialized out of several experiential and intellectual encounters.
During visits to Alabama, U.S.A., and Sonora, Mexico, I was
struck by the presence of unemployed young black men on the streets of
Alabama and of ghost villages in Sonora. While America appears to have
accepted growing populations of unemployed and imprisoned African
Americans, it seems to be at war with, or at least ambivalent about, immigrants.
The ambivalence I experienced in Arizona, currently a major
thoroughfare for immigrant traffi c and engulfed in a fi restorm of contentious
debate.
Daftar copy :
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Barcode |
Lokasi |
No. Rak |
Ketersediaan |
1 |
00131541 |
Perpustakaan Pusat |
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TIDAK DIPINJAMKAN |
Diproses dalam : 0.15683388710022 detik