Many communities in Mexico have been deeply affected by the large-scale emigration of workers to the U.S. Abigail Andrews examines the effects of migration on one such village, San Miguel. She finds that far from a source of “freedom,” for this community migration was a source of strain. She writes that with so many people having left the village to work in the U.S., the community’s system of participatory self-government was in crisis. Meanwhile, in the U.S., migrants from San Miguel faced persecution and abuse, since most of them were undocumented immigrants. This drove several migrant women of the village to return home. When the women returned, they took on central roles in local politics, in order to protect their communal way of life ...
textCentral American immigrant women living in the Mexico-Guatemala border city of Tapachula routine...
<p>This present paper focus on female action on migratory phenomenon in Mexico collecting data from ...
n February researchers from the International Migration Research Centre (IMRC) participated in “the ...
Early research suggested that migration changed gender roles by offering women new wages and exposin...
Over the past three decades, free-market policies have debilitated life in rural Mexico, driving mig...
Mexican migration to the United States has become a pressing concern subject to widespread debate. B...
Women’s migration within Mexico and from Mexico to the United States is increasing; nearly as many w...
As one of Mexico’s last agricultural frontiers, southern Mexico’s rural farming municipality of Cala...
Until recently, rural households in southeastern Mexico have survived on subsistence and chili farmi...
The momentous influx of Mexican undocumented workers into the United States over the last decades ha...
Using a mixed methods, interdisciplinary case study approach, this research project explores the ben...
There is a tendency in academic literature regarding Mexican migration to the United States, to refe...
This investigation concerns children and caregivers in Santa Ursula, a town in Puebla, Mexico from w...
Mexican undocumented women are essential in migrating in many households; they are often at the cent...
Mexico is a transit country for hundreds of thousands of migrants traveling north. Due to economic l...
textCentral American immigrant women living in the Mexico-Guatemala border city of Tapachula routine...
<p>This present paper focus on female action on migratory phenomenon in Mexico collecting data from ...
n February researchers from the International Migration Research Centre (IMRC) participated in “the ...
Early research suggested that migration changed gender roles by offering women new wages and exposin...
Over the past three decades, free-market policies have debilitated life in rural Mexico, driving mig...
Mexican migration to the United States has become a pressing concern subject to widespread debate. B...
Women’s migration within Mexico and from Mexico to the United States is increasing; nearly as many w...
As one of Mexico’s last agricultural frontiers, southern Mexico’s rural farming municipality of Cala...
Until recently, rural households in southeastern Mexico have survived on subsistence and chili farmi...
The momentous influx of Mexican undocumented workers into the United States over the last decades ha...
Using a mixed methods, interdisciplinary case study approach, this research project explores the ben...
There is a tendency in academic literature regarding Mexican migration to the United States, to refe...
This investigation concerns children and caregivers in Santa Ursula, a town in Puebla, Mexico from w...
Mexican undocumented women are essential in migrating in many households; they are often at the cent...
Mexico is a transit country for hundreds of thousands of migrants traveling north. Due to economic l...
textCentral American immigrant women living in the Mexico-Guatemala border city of Tapachula routine...
<p>This present paper focus on female action on migratory phenomenon in Mexico collecting data from ...
n February researchers from the International Migration Research Centre (IMRC) participated in “the ...