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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Making Sense of Settlement: Class Transformation, Cultural Struggle, and Transnationalism among Mexican Migrants in the United States

Roger Rouse
- 01 Jul 1992 - 
- Vol. 645, Iss: 1, pp 25-52
TLDR
In Mexico, the great majority of migration has been temporary and circular as discussed by the authors, and since the late 1960s, there has been a marked growth in settlement, and it has become increasingly common for people to stay for extended periods and to establish new homes in Mexico.
Abstract
Mexicans have been migrating to the United States in significant numbers for more than a hundred years. From the outset, the great majority of this migration has been temporary and circular. Contrary to popular opinion, people have generally come for periods ranging from a few months to a couple of years and then returned home (Cockcroft 1982; Cornelius 1979). Since the late 1960s, however, there has been a marked growth in settlement. While temporary migration continues to predominate, it has become increasingly common for people to stay for extended periods and to establish new homes north of the border (Chavez 1988; Cornelius, in press). How should we understand the experiences of these recent settlers? What kinds of influence have they faced, and how have they responded? More importantly, how should we theorize and conceptualize their relationship to the contexts in which they have lived? For more than forty years, the ethnographically based literature on Mexican migration has been dominated by two closely related tendencies.' First, migration in general has been analyzed

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Methodological Nationalism and Beyond: Nation-State Building, Migration and the Social Sciences

TL;DR: In this paper, a historical tour d'horizon of the development of the notion of transnational communities is presented, showing that this mainstream concept has developed in close interaction with nationstate building pro- cesses in the West and the role that immigration and integration policies have played within them.
Journal ArticleDOI

Migrant “Illegality” and Deportability in Everyday Life

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the study of undocumented migration as an epistemological, methodological, and political problem, in order to then formulate it as a theoretical problem, and argue that it is necessary also to produce historically informed accounts of the sociopolitical processes of "illegalization" themselves, which can be characterized as the legal production.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conceptualizing simultaneity: a transnational social field perspective on society

TL;DR: This paper explored the social theory and consequent methodology that underpins studies of transnational migration and pointed out that assimilation and enduring transnational ties are neither incompatible nor binary opposites.

From immigrant to transmigrant : Theorizing transnational migration

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use their own studies of migration from Haiti, St Vincent, Grenada and the Philippines to the United States to delineate some of the parameters of an ethnography of transnational migration and explore the reasons for and the implications of trans-national migrations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social remittances: migration driven local-level forms of cultural diffusion.

TL;DR: This article specifies how the ideas, behaviors, identities, and social capital that flow from receiving- to sending- country communities are remolded in receiving countries, the mechanisms by which they are sent back to sending communities, and the role they play in transforming sending-country social and political life.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison

Robert D'Amico
- 20 Jun 1978 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present La Volonté de Savoir, the methodological introduction of a projected five-volume history of sexuality, which seems to have a special fascination for Foucault: the gradual emergence of medicine as an institution, the birth of political economy, demography and linguistics as human sciences, the invention of incarceration and confinement for the control of the "other" in society (the mad, the libertine, the criminal) and that special violence that lurks beneath the power to control discourse.
MonographDOI

The mobility of labor and capital : a study in international investment and labor flow

TL;DR: The use of foreign workers in the United States is a neglected variable as mentioned in this paper, and foreign investment is a major variable in the U.S.'s economic growth, and the globalization of production: implications for labor migration.
Journal ArticleDOI

FROM THE INVISIBLE HAND TO VISIBLE FEET: Anthropological Studies of Migration and Development

TL;DR: This is a review of the literature on the relationship between migration and development from an ethnographic perspective, with a focus on theoretical advances and their applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Settlers and Sojourners: The Case of Mexicans in the United States

TL;DR: The behavior of single migrants (including individuals who migrated without spouse or children) is compared to that of migrants accompanied by spouse and/or children in relation to a number of factors, including the outcome of migration experiences, variation in household composition over time, attitudes concerning residence preferences, and labor market participation.
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