Links

Tools

Export citation

Search in Google Scholar

Labor Contractors, Coyotes, and Travelers: The migration industry in Latin America and the U.S. South (Contrapunto). ; Contratistas, coyotes y viajeros: La industria de la migración en Latinoamérica y el sur de los Estados Unidos.

Published in 2016 by David Griffith
This paper was not found in any repository; the policy of its publisher is unknown or unclear.
This paper was not found in any repository; the policy of its publisher is unknown or unclear.

Full text: Unavailable

Question mark in circle
Preprint: policy unknown
Question mark in circle
Postprint: policy unknown
Question mark in circle
Published version: policy unknown

Abstract

Durante los años 90, sociólogos y antropólogos estudiosos de la migración se centraron de manera desproporcionada en la idea del transnacionalismo, generando estudios de fenómenos importantes tales como la paternidad transnacional, la política de diáspora e identidad, la ciudadanía flexible, las remesas sociales y, otros temas relacionados a factores que influyen en la experiencia de la migración internacional. Este trabajo también produjo relatos etnográficos de familias y comunidades que poseen lazos de pertenencia en por los menos dos países. Tales relatos etnográficos generaron descripciones y perfiles de gentes que habían forjado vínculos entre locaciones en base a oportunidades económicas, intercambios culturales, y redes sociales. ; During the 1990s, migration researchers in sociology and anthropology focused disproportionately on the idea of transnationalism, leading to investigations of critically important phenomena such as transnational parenting, diaspora politics and identity, flexible citizenship, social remittances, and other factors influencing the experiences of international migrants. This work also produced comprehensive ethnographic accounts of families and communities with attachments to places in two or more countries, profiling peoples who had forged dynamic relations between sending and receiving neighborhoods based on economic opportunities, cultural exchanges, and social networks.