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The Price of Poverty: Money, Work, and Culture in the Mexican American Barrio

Author Daniel Dohan
Publisher University of California Press
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28.76 31.95 USD
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Book Details
Author(s)Daniel Dohan
ISBN / ASIN0520238893
ISBN-139780520238893
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,126,127
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Drawing on two years of ethnographic fieldwork in two impoverished California communities—one made up of recent immigrants from Mexico, the other of U.S.-born Chicano citizens—this book provides an invaluable comparative perspective on Latino poverty in contemporary America. In northern California’s high-tech Silicon Valley, author Daniel Dohan shows how recent immigrants get by on low-wage babysitting and dish-cleaning jobs. In the housing projects of Los Angeles, he documents how families and communities of U.S.-born Mexican Americans manage the social and economic dislocations of persistent poverty. Taking readers into worlds where public assistance, street crime, competition for low-wage jobs, and family, pride, and cross-cultural experiences intermingle, The Price of Poverty offers vivid portraits of everyday life in these Mexican American communities while addressing urgent policy questions such as: What accounts for joblessness? How can we make sense of crime in poor communities? Does welfare hurt or help?