Marcelli E. A. (2004) Unauthorized Mexican immigration, day labour and other lower-wage informal employment in California, Reg. Studies 38, 1-13. Consistent with the marginalization but not the globalization hypothesis, this paper finds that the level of lower-wage informal employment in California during the 1990s fell from 17% to 14% of the labour force; informal workers were more likely to be male, younger, non-white, foreign-born, and employed in the Personal Service and Agriculture sectors; and a Californian was more likely to work informally if residing in a relatively less populous, lower-income region with a relatively high rate of home ownership. Although welfare use had a positive effect on the probability of working informally in...
Chapter 1 replicates and extends Khamis (2009) to provide a detailed analysis of informality in the ...
Based on fieldwork conducted during 1981 in Ventura County, California, this study helps to explain ...
The 1990s were a period of record immigration to California and the United States, with both legal a...
Employment in the informal sector is thought to be large, growing, and connected to workers on the m...
This report examines the labor force position of Latina and Latino immigrants in California. There ...
As of 2004 California employed almost 30% of all foreign born workers in the U.S. and was the state ...
This paper investigates the relationship between immigration and the size of the informal or undergr...
This study observes how residents and unauthorized immigrants reacted innovatively alongside the und...
This paper describes the labor mobility of a group of Mexican migrant workers that are permanent leg...
This paper examines the status of Mexican labor in Los Angeles since 1970, th...
This study examines the labor market costs associated with being foreign-born and not having U.S. ci...
The domestic household service sector of contract gardening dominated by Mexican immigrants in Los A...
This working paper examines the relationship between the transformation of labor markets and the rol...
immigrants are strongly attached to labor markets while the US-born poor more often suffer from deta...
Over the past 40 years, the city of San Jose, in the Santa Clara Valley of northern California, has ...
Chapter 1 replicates and extends Khamis (2009) to provide a detailed analysis of informality in the ...
Based on fieldwork conducted during 1981 in Ventura County, California, this study helps to explain ...
The 1990s were a period of record immigration to California and the United States, with both legal a...
Employment in the informal sector is thought to be large, growing, and connected to workers on the m...
This report examines the labor force position of Latina and Latino immigrants in California. There ...
As of 2004 California employed almost 30% of all foreign born workers in the U.S. and was the state ...
This paper investigates the relationship between immigration and the size of the informal or undergr...
This study observes how residents and unauthorized immigrants reacted innovatively alongside the und...
This paper describes the labor mobility of a group of Mexican migrant workers that are permanent leg...
This paper examines the status of Mexican labor in Los Angeles since 1970, th...
This study examines the labor market costs associated with being foreign-born and not having U.S. ci...
The domestic household service sector of contract gardening dominated by Mexican immigrants in Los A...
This working paper examines the relationship between the transformation of labor markets and the rol...
immigrants are strongly attached to labor markets while the US-born poor more often suffer from deta...
Over the past 40 years, the city of San Jose, in the Santa Clara Valley of northern California, has ...
Chapter 1 replicates and extends Khamis (2009) to provide a detailed analysis of informality in the ...
Based on fieldwork conducted during 1981 in Ventura County, California, this study helps to explain ...
The 1990s were a period of record immigration to California and the United States, with both legal a...