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Braceros: Migrant Citizens and Transnational Subjects in the Postwar United States and Mexico

Author Deborah Cohen,
Publisher The University of North Carolina Press
Category Political Science
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Book Details
ISBN / ASIN0807833592
ISBN-139780807833599
Sales Rank3,318,435
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

At the beginning of World War II, the United States and Mexico launched the bracero program, a series of labor agreements that brought Mexican men to work temporarily in U.S. agricultural fields. In Braceros, historian Deborah Cohen asks why these temporary migrants provoked so much concern and anxiety in the United States and what the Mexican government expected to gain in participating in the program. Cohen reveals the fashioning of a U.S.-Mexican transnational world, a world created through the interactions, negotiations, and struggles of the program's principal protagonists including Mexican and U.S. state actors, labor activists, growers, and bracero migrants. Cohen argues that braceros became racialized foreigners, Mexican citizens, workers, and transnational subjects as they moved between U.S. and Mexican national spaces.Drawing on oral histories, ethnographic fieldwork, and documentary evidence, Cohen creatively links the often unconnected themes of exploitation,
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