The environmental status and living situation
The environmental status and living situation
Ruth Gomberg-Muñoz’s ethnography Labor and Legality uses a mixture of narrative, interviews, and observation to educate the reader about the lives of undocumented workers in the United States. Gomberg-Muñoz focuses specifically on a group in Chicago called the Lions and describes how this small group has managed to create their own culture made up of language, social structure, kinship, gender roles, and authority. Often the Lions have to navigate between three different cultures: the one they were raised in, in Léon; the American culture; and the one they created as undocumented workers. The Lions are from Léon, Guanajuato, Mexico so Spanish is their first language.…
Maria Estela Monreal is a 77 year old Mexican female. Maria, a devoted Catholic, is this writer’s maternal Grandmother. Maria was born on July 29th of 1938 in Matatan, Sinaloa, Mexico. During her teenage years after her father’s death Maria’s mother decided to move with 5 children across two states. Maria and her family started a new life in San Luis Rio Colorado, Sonora, Mexico where later she met her husband.…
In David Shiplers The Working Poor: Invisible in America he starts off by stating how often the American lower class citizens are ripped off and treated poorly in modern American business, due in part to their ignorance of labor laws or their spending habits. Chapter two talks mostly in part about the hardest working jobs end up giving the least back to the worker. The most dangerous jobs have the lowest pay and the least benefits, especially when talking about the workers family there is virtually no healthcare benefits in some low wage jobs. These jobs are also time consuming and the workers family doesn’t get half the attention that they need from a parent or loved one. Chapter three talks about how the binding jell of the American economy is the immigrant, legal and illegal.…
During the years of 1876 to 1911, Porfirian Mexico launched into a period of modernization. In William Beezley’s work Judas at the Jockey Club, he addresses how this modernization initiated both social and economic tension between the small percentage of elites and impoverished masses and resulted in cultural resistance. According to Beezley, Mexico was bewitched under what he describes as “Porfirian persuasion,” and under this ideology the state was determined to establish ideas of efficiency and progress. The basis of these ideals came from the influences of the United States and Europe.…
I never read a core book in high school. Reading has just never been my thing, until I came to college. Since I was paying for my classes, I figured I actually had to start doing the things I am required to do, such as reading. This year, I was introduced to a book called Enrique’s Journey by Sonia Nazario.…
While there has always been substantial immigration from countries around the world, Mexican immigrants dominate the statistics. Between 1820 and 1930, Mexicans constituted over half of the documented immigrations. Like many immigrants before them and certainly after them, they experienced discrimination in the United States. Stereotyping and bouts of xenophobia sparked deadly riots against the most prominent minority group in the United States. Early experiences for foreign-born Mexican immigrants, and even first-generation Mexican Americans, was filled with discriminatory behavior aimed at them by police authorities and other citizens of the country.…
Immigrants, more often than not, come to America for the chance of a better life. However, immigration, particularly among Mexican women, does not always lead to better health outcomes. Health disparities among Mexican immigrant women living in the United States arise due to the intersection of various determinants. For example, immigration status and gender can lead Mexican immigrant women to experience a reduction in labor market access and activity in the United States (Leite et al., 2010). This in turn limits them to living in less than favorable economic conditions (Leite, Angoa, Castaneda, Felt, Schenker & Ramirez, 2013).…
In the article, “Mexican Immigrant Families Crossing the Education Border: A Phenomenological Study” by Sandra Ixa Plata-Potter and Maria Rosario T. de Guzman, they examine Mexican immigrant parents that confront challenges to help their children succeed in school. Considering that Latinos now make up the biggest minority group in the United States, most Latinos are less likely to complete college. The study presented in this article is an attempt to examine the experience of Mexican immigrant parents as they guide their children to maneuver the United States educational system. Differences in performances between the United States and Mexico such as, language barriers and other challenges, caused these parents to sometimes feel discouraged…
This article examines how factors like ethnicity and gender as well as other social constructs determine the mobility of second-generation Mexican American men and women, focusing on their education and career success in America. It explores the theoretical issues in regards to them not fitting the research statistics for Mexican Americans in New York City. As well as discussing results of gender roles of parents at home, gendered ethnicity in the labor market, and the dynamics of gendered ethnicity in school choice. Overall it emphasizes the point of the success and adaptability of the women in these Mexican American cultures from childhood into being an adult, examining how their success results from their gender and ethnicity in environments…
Another social factor that is impacting many individuals around the world and characters in Nickel and Dimed is food insecurity. According to the article, “Annually, 39 million persons experience food insecurity, Food insecurity is defined as having limited or uncertain availability of nutritionally adequate and safe foods or ability to acquire foods in a acceptable way” (pg 71). This quote exhibits that large number of people face food instability meaning that they don’t have or have enough safe and healthy food to intake. An individual might believe that people who have a job should be able to feed themselves. In reality many face difficulties choosing whether to feed themselves or paying the rent in which choosing to pay the rent becomes…
Health Care Barriers for Poor Asian Americans Language is being identified as the most formidable barrier for poor Asian American immigrants in accessing healthcare (Mayeno & Hirota, 1994). Among with language, health literacy, health insurance, and immigration status. Asian Americans suffer in poverty as well when living in the United States, so not being able to afford or qualifying for health insurance. In a research article I read that there are three distinct immigration groups; some come voluntary, others leave their country because of political issues and wars and the others are decedents of immigrants who have never seen their homeland.…
He wants to live in a middle-class style family. There-fore, he gets ready to work. In his mind work means earn money, then he can change his family. However, his mother and his sister are both thought he is a crazy Mexican and insist on their cul-ture. As a working class, the boy’s family thinks his attitude is strange, cultures and races are hard to overcome.…
The Sanchez Family is a large Mexican family that has a series of situations that is affecting each family member, but also is affecting them as a whole. Celia and Hector have been married for forty years and they have lived in the United States for twenty years. Celia has dedicated herself to taking care of the family and their home. Unfortunately, she has not been able to learn to speak English which has been a barrier for her. She is extremely worried about their finances and how they are going to meet everyone’s needs.…
My families’ migration story dates back to three generations. My great-grandfather came to the United States for the first time through the Bracero Program; a program that “brought millions of Mexican guest workers to the United States [which] grew out of a series of bilateral agreements between Mexico and the United States short-term, from 1942 to 1964.” Unfortunately, my great-grandfather passed away a while back when I was very young, therefore, for this assignment, I decided to acknowledge my parents’ migration story, a story that relies on a series of events that tore our family apart but simultaneously brought us closer together. I interviewed my mother and my father regarding, their own individual migration stories while also focusing…
Growing up in a big mixed family is a must to know two different languages, Spanish and English. It’s a great disadvantage because Today, I 'm a bilingual. Well, semi-bilingual. It’s useful to be able to communicate with my family, for work, and pretty much everywhere I go. But at the end of it all, it’s a blessing and curse.…