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Economic Life of Mexican Beach Vendors: Acapulco, Puerto Vallarta, and Cabo San Lucas is based on interviews with 82 men and 84 women who vend their wares on beaches in three Mexican tourist centers. Assuming that some people may actively choose self-employment in the informal or semi-informal economy, the employment and educational aspirations of the vendors and their levels of satisfaction with their work are explored. Most of the vendors had other family members who were also vendors, and 75 (45.2 percent) had 5 or more family members who vended, most usually on Mexican beaches. The vendors are aware of the forces of globalization (though they do not express these forces in those words), as revealed by their responses to questions as to how the current world economic recession has affected them. The beach vendors live in essentially segregated neighborhoods that can be considered apartheid-like, far from the tourist zones. Most of the vendors or their parents are rural-to-urban migrants and cross ethnic, linguistic, and economic borders as they migrate to and work in what have been called transnational social spaces. Of the vendors interviewed, 82 (49.4 percent) speak an indigenous language, and of these, 60 (73.2 percent) speak Nahuatl. The majority are from the state of Guerrero, but there were also Zapotec-speakers from Oaxaca. Both indigenous and non-indigenous women take part in beach vending. They are often wives, daughters, or sisters of male beach vendors, and they may be single, married, living in free union, or widowed. Their income is often of central importance to the household economy. This monograph aims to bring their stories to tourists and to scholars and students of tourism development and /or the informal or semi-informal economy in Mexican tourist centers.
While animal suffering and abuse have taken place throughout history, the alienation of humanity from nature caused by the development of capitalism - by the logic of capital and its system of generalized commodity production - accelerated and increased the depredations in scope and scale. The capitalist commodification of animals is extensive. It includes, but is not limited to: livestock production in concentrated animal feeding operations leather and fur production the ivory trade in which tusks are used for 'traditional medicines; or carved into decorative objects entertainment such as in zoos, marine parks, and circuses laboratory experimentation to test medicines, beauty products, pesticides, and other chemicals the pursuit of trophy hunting, sometimes on canned farms and sometimes in the wild bioengineering of livestock and of animals used in laboratories The contributors to this special issue of Research in Political Economy provide insightful analyses that address the historical transformations in the material conditions and ideological conceptions of nonhuman animals, alienated speciesism, the larger ecological crisis that is undermining the conditions of life for all species, and the capitalist commodification of animals that results in widespread suffering, death, and profits. This book is a must-read not only for political economists, but also for researchers interested in animal studies, environmentalism, and sustainability.
In these poems Tamar Diana Wilson has created indellible portraits
of women, the challenges women of the world face and how they
overcome them.
Some From Zacatecas is the story of the migration and adaptation of an extended family of undocumented immigrants from that Mexican State to the west side of Los Angeles, and how some of them received amnesty after the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act and some did not. The book looks at the daily lives and interactions of a group of brothers, their wives, and their cousins. It looks both at the triumphs and the tragedies that some migrant workers face during their journey to the north.
Creative non-fiction or fiction, Tales from Colonia Popular seeks
to describe the lives of people the author met in a squatter
settlement in Mexicali, where she lived from 1988 to 1994. They are
meant to depict the struggles of the poor in the face of seemingly
overwhelming odds. They tell the stories of women who live in the
colonia, including a woman who received Special Agricultural
Workers' amnesty for working in the fields in the Imperial Valley
and Salinas, a woman who was the colonia's president, and a woman
who works in the maquiladora plants. They also tell stories of men
who live in the colonia, including a former garbage picker, a
drywaller who longs to give his family more than their income can
provide, and a young man who was a coyote's helper when he was a
child.
Despite women's presence in migration streams since the
mid-nineteenth century, research on Mexican women's migration has a
significantly shorter history than that which focuses on Mexican
men. In this contemporary anthropological study, Tamar Diana Wilson
couples an analytical migratory network analysis with an intimate
ethnography and oral history to explore the characteristics,
development, and dynamics of migration networks for Mexican women.
Centering on the story of doAAa Consuelo, a woman Wilson met in a
Mexicali squatter settlement in 1988, as well as on the stories of
her two daughters in the United States, this study examines the
vital role that women's networks play, both within Mexico and
transnationally, not only in assisting other women to migrate, but
in providing support for male family members as well.
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