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Mireya Loza's Reading List

Mireya Loza is a historian, curator, educator and author and Associate Professor in the Department of History and the American Studies Program at Georgetown University. Her areas of research include Latinx history, social movements, labour history and food studies.

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Migrant Workers (2021)

Scraped from fivebooks.com (2021-02-05).

Source: fivebooks.com

Cindy Hahamovitch · Buy on Amazon
"Cindy Hahamovitch does a really great job of showing us how the US guest worker programs fit within the larger history of global guest workers. She sheds light on how the needs of American agribusinesses for a mobile workforce impacted US immigration policy and had reverberations across the globe. Right. She starts by setting the scene with a history of guest workers across the globe. Then she moves us into the specific example of British West Indies guest workers in the US, who were primarily Jamaican. She highlights the racism these workers encountered and how policy makers used this workforce to meet agribusinesses’ need for labor without necessarily creating pathways to permanent residency for immigrants. She does a great job of showing us how Jamaican workers in the US contributed to our understandings of race, citizenship, and agricultural labor. This continues to ring true as growers continue to recruit Jamaican farmworkers in the present. Growers wanted the ability to control the mobility of these workers. Early Mexican guest workers could skip out on contracts and move into different employment. So, growers got good at making sure that these people didn’t have that mobility, that they couldn’t break the terms of their contracts and that they were easily deportable. Now we have H-2a workers whose mobility is controlled by their employers. Hahamovitch shows us how policy makers and growers designed the guest worker program to make these laborers exploitable."
Mireya Loza · Buy on Amazon
"I look at Mexican workers that came through the Bracero program, the largest guest worker program in American history . In many ways, my book challenges notions that these workers were homogenous. Mexican guest workers came from distinct racial backgrounds. They worked out the intricacies of indigeneity and identity in this new context, as guest workers in the United States. I looked at their sexual practices, their ideas of masculinity, their attachments to family and how they pushed back against exploitation through labor organizing. They teach us that agribusiness was really good at convincing everyone that migrant workers didn’t have to have pathways to citizenship or even residency, that it was okay to create a perpetual caste of outsiders to feed Americans, a workforce that can be deported and exploited. Although they came in with contracts that were supposed to protect them, over and over what we see is that when they tried to make growers abide by the terms of their contracts, growers easily deported them or blacklisted them and barred them from obtaining future contracts. The power was held by the growers. “Migrant workers have been essential to American economic development for many generations” They also held an interesting space in American society. In the US, we have citizens, residents, undocumented people and guest workers. But this particular state-sanctioned relationship, the guest worker, is constructed to be a right-less worker perpetually living in the margins of America. Why we’ve come to accept that boggles my mind. It’s a model that has been adopted across Europe and in other countries that want agricultural workers or construction workers but don’t want permanent immigrants in their cities and their communities. Women weren’t allowed to come through the World War II guest worker programs for fear that they’d give birth to children who would be, by birthright, citizens. So, in the US, for the most part, at least during the era of the Bracero program, women were excluded. But later, as global demand for healthcare workers and domestic workers grow, we see women included in these programs. And now Mexican women work as temporary labor, in specific food production businesses, for instance in the East Coast crab industry, where women are seen as the most productive laborers. These women are persuaded to put their family lives and even their sex lives on hold. That is the most troubling part for me. This workforce also doesn’t have access to family because, by design, they can’t bring their children, they cannot bring their spouses. So, these programs are designing a workforce with transnational family ties, and where it is normal for children not to see their parents for a large part of the year. A parent might not be able to see their child off on their first day of school or celebrate their birthday."
Cristina Salinas · Buy on Amazon
"Cristina Salinas takes us to one of the most interesting states to study migrant workers, Texas. She examines how growers work within a matrix of federal, state, and local power and unpacks how all of these forces shape the movement and lives of migrant workers. The book lets us see moments where the daily decisions of Border Patrol don’t uphold immigration law but instead serve the interests of growers. It’s an essential read if you want to understand how workers are managed by national (Mexico and US), state, and local actors."
Verónica Martínez-Matsuda · Buy on Amazon
"Martinez Matsuda takes us to the late 1930s, early 1940s, when the US Farm Security Administration comes in to manage labor camps. There’s a moment when the lives of migrant workers become better because of government regulation and intervention. Martinez Matsuda takes us to labor camps across the US. These labor camps look very different from what they looked like in the late 1940s and 1950s. Through the Farm Security Administration, workers had access to sanitary housing, medical service, recreational spaces, educational opportunities and even lessons in citizenship. Martinez Matsuda argues that these FSA labor camps’ efforts to get people to exercise their rights as citizens sparked a civil rights movement. So Migrant Citizenship shows us that the miserable conditions imposed on migrant workers in the late 1940s, 1950s and 1960s were not necessary—that there is an example of just treatment of temporary labor in our own national past. This book shows us how New Deal liberalism shaped labor camps as multiracial spaces that strengthened the link between democracy and labor. It reminds us that the relationship between business and labor wasn’t always configured so that workers were always on the losing end. It teaches us that government can oversee these programs in ways that engender greater fairness rather than more inequality."
Sarah Wald · Buy on Amazon
"Sarah Wald uses ecocritism to examine depictions of farmers, farmworkers and the American landscape in literature and historical documents. She sheds light on what they tell us about the relationship between race and citizenship. In the US, we start with this Jeffersonian ideal of white male yeoman farmers. When Japanese immigrants, Filipino farmworkers and Mexican pickers enter the picture, they are racialized and marginalized. Wald has a keen eye for the complex relationships between the geographical landscape and the racial landscape. The history of migrant workers teaches who we are as a nation. It teaches us how we developed racialized ideas about who is worthy of citizenship and who is not worthy of citizenship. Ironically, our hardest workers, the people who feed us, are always on the losing end of this conversation about citizenship. We have yet to include the folks who feed us in our nation-state. We have continued to allow agribusiness to exploit farmworkers. Under Trump, their lives have become even more difficult because of the propagation of xenophobic rhetoric that casts them as lawbreakers, criminals and problems. The people who live on American soil, cultivate American soil and feed Americans are an important part of the American story. Migrant workers have been cast as alien for far too long. My book springs from years of working with the National Museum of American History on the Bracero archive and the exhibition that sprung from the archive, “ Bittersweet Harvest .” We collected over 800 stories from Bracero communities, that your readers can listen to at braceroarchive.org . The goal of all of these efforts was to remind Americans that Mexican migrant workers have been contributing to American culture and society for a very long time. But my personal goal was also to make sure that Latinx youth knew this history. Get the weekly Five Books newsletter Often immigrants are cast as unwanted interlopers and as a problem. The history of Braceros and migrant workers generally shows that is absolutely not true. American growers and American policymakers wanted Mexicans to come; that is why they crafted programs to bring them to the United States. Grievously, they made sure those programs kept these workers at the margins. As I was working on the Bracero history project, when I encountered Latinx youth, I’d say, ‘this history is yours; it shows that your ancestors paid a high price for your belonging in America.’ Whether documented or undocumented, Latinx history is a central part of American history. Migrant workers have been essential to American economic development for many generations. When this younger generation learns that, they sit taller and prouder."

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