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Alexander Monto looks at how labor migration flows from Mexico to
the United States are directed and structured, and what changes
they bring in the sending and receiving communities. He places
cyclical migration in the context of historical and economic
developments in Mexico and the United States, and he concludes that
the circulatory movement is an element in the well-established
world economic system that has endured for a hundred years. Monto
focuses on one Mexican town with high migrancy and on one of its
migrants' main destinations, Salinas, California. He describes the
network linking the two communities, which migrants use to maximize
employment, minimize expenses, and return with the proceeds to
Mexico, where they will be able to buy more. Monto finds that
although macrosocial factors create the economic polarization that
propels migration, the migrants are not merely pawns being pushed
and pulled; instead, they use circulatory migration as one of
several options selected according to their role in their domestic
group and the group's particular needs. He concludes that this
labor circulation is not a transitional phase bound to disappear
when Mexico's workforce is converted to wage laborers, but a
permanent, institutionalized component of Mexico's periphery-core
relationship to the United States. In the next few years, predicts
Monto, the proposed North American Free Trade Agreement, together
with agricultural consolidation already underway in Mexico, will
probably augment rather than reduce migration.
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