Robert Courtney Smith's groundbreaking study sheds new light on transnationalism, vividly illustrating how immigrants move back and forth between New York and their home village in Puebla with considerable ease, borrowing from and contributing to both communities as they forge new gender roles; new strategies of social mobility, race, and even adolescence; and new brands of politics and egalitarianism. Smith's deeply informed narrative describes how first-generation men who have lived in New York for decades become important political leaders in their home villages in Mexico.
Smith explains how relations between immigrant men and women and their U. He illustrates how U. Mexican New York profoundly deepens our knowledge of immigration as a social process, convincingly showing how some immigrants live and function in two worlds at the same time and how transnationalization and assimilation are not opposing, but related, phenomena. List of Illustrations Acknowledgments 1. Transnational Life in Ethnographic Perspective 2. Gender Strategies, Settlement, and Transnational Life 6.
I can take a free guest to Moma and Museum of Natural history, if you like museums. At InterNations, Mexicans in New York can enjoy a platform on which they can share their experiences and tips on living abroad. The InterNations community in New York is also a very lively offline network. Our regular expat events organized by our Ambassadors at the best venues in town are a fantastic way to meet fellow Mexicans in New York.
Then simply sign up to become a member and you will soon be warmly welcomed among our Mexicans living in New York. The top events organized in the New York chapter helped me get to know expat women from France and many other countries all over the world. Log in. Connect with fellow Mexicans in New York. Get information in our New York guide.
Join exciting events and activities. Exchange tips about expat life in New York. Javier Vazquez Even in a crowded city like the Big Apple you can easily get lost. Meet other Mexicans in New York. Meet fellow Mexicans at our events in New York Attend our monthly events and activities and join various interest-based groups to get to know like-minded expatriates and fellow Mexicans in New York.
Want to meet other Mexicans at our events? Our Global Partners. Enjoy a Healthy Summer! Improve your network: Relationship Management! Where can I meet other Mexicans? Are there Mexican schools in New York? Around the Big Apple Group. Artists Group. And All That Jazz Group. Language Exchange Group. Find other Mexicans to share your hobbies with. Surf through our network of Mexican expats in New York and get to know the local expat crowd.
Join today to receive trustworthy, first-hand advice from fellow Mexicans in our New York forum. Take full advantage of the Expat Guide for New York and find useful information on your new hometown. Noemi Roussel The top events organized in the New York chapter helped me get to know expat women from France and many other countries all over the world.
Mexican Expats in Washington, D. Mexican Expats in Los Angeles. Mexican Expats in Chicago. Mexican Expats in Houston. Mexican Expats in San Francisco. Mexican Expats in Miami. Mexican Expats in Atlanta. Mexican Expats in Dallas. Mexican Expats in San Diego. Mexican Expats in Austin. Mexican Expats in Silicon Valley. Mexican Expats in Phoenix. Albanians in New York. Algerians in New York. Argentinians in New York. Armenians in New York. Mexican migrants, in particular, have generally been successful in securing only highly unskilled jobs in New York, mostly in manufacturing, construction and the service sector.
Mexican men have a special niche in the food services and food retail industries, where as much as 42 percent of all Mexican male workers in New York are employed. In some jobs in this sector, the Mexican presence is palpable: 20 percent of all men employed as cooks and food preparation workers in New York are Mexican.
Many Contend with Low Wages, Poverty, Exploitation The highly unskilled employment niches where many Mexican laborers thrive are also low-earnings sectors. For some workers, labor market discrimination is another force to contend with, particularly among undocumented migrants, who frequently suffer from exploitation in underground labor markets. As a result, the average earnings of Mexican men and women are sharply lower than those of the rest of the New York workforce.
Although the income per-capita of Mexicans is extremely low by New York City standards, the income that Mexican immigrants receive often represents an enormous leap compared to the situation they would have faced in Mexico.
Average household income per person in the state of Puebla in Mexico is about 40 percent of that for the average Mexican household in New York. But Rivera-Batiz emphasizes that the comparison of the social and economic situation of Mexican New Yorkers with that of other groups in the city is still highly relevant.
As a result, their economic well-being and that of their children is linked to New York," says Rivera-Batiz. Ignoring them would undermine the valuable contributions that are being made by Mexicans to the city. Teachers College is the largest graduate school of education in the nation. It is affiliated with Columbia University, but it is legally and financially independent. The editors of U. News and World Report have ranked Teachers College as one of the leading graduate schools of education in the country.
For more information about Teachers College, please visit our Web site at www.
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