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MEXICAN AMERICANS

MEXICAN AMERICANS. CHAPTER 8. Latinos Persons whose national origins (or whose ancestors’ national origins) are in the countries of Latin America Caribbean, Central and South America Hispanic An English word derived from Hispania Roman name for Spain. THE CONQUEST PERIOD, 1500-1853.

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MEXICAN AMERICANS

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  1. MEXICAN AMERICANS CHAPTER 8

  2. Latinos • Persons whose national origins (or whose ancestors’ national origins) are in the countries of Latin America • Caribbean, Central and South America • Hispanic • An English word derived from Hispania • Roman name for Spain

  3. THE CONQUEST PERIOD, 1500-1853 • In 1500s, Spaniards conquered; sought to Catholicize indigenous population in Mexico and southwestern U.S. for economic exploitation • Offspring of sexual liaisons • Mestizos • Mixed people • Outnumbered colonizers

  4. Depiction of casta system in Mexico from the Museo Nacional del Virreinato.

  5. Las castas. Anonymous, 18th century, oil on canvas, Museo Nacional del Virreinato, Tepotzotl, Mexico.

  6. Casta Paintings: Inventing Race Through ArtMexican Art Genre Reveals 18th-Century Attitudes on Racial Mixing - June 2004 LA County Museum of Art The upper-class Spaniards views on race, class and skin color during the 1700s, when Mexico was a colony of Spain… "De Espaniol y Albina, Torna Atras" = "From a Spaniard and Albino, return backwards."

  7. The Texas Revolt: (1820-1830s) 1821 Mexican independence 1830s Anglo American presence • Mexican government: freed enslaved people and placed restrictions on U.S. immigration, • Texas rebellion • U.S. settlers go beyond an existing boundary and intentionally aim to create new territory (Texas portion of Mexican state Coahuila y Tejas) • 1836 Republic of Texas; 1845 joins US • 1848 Mexico surrenders ($15 million) • Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

  8. The Mexican Cession agreed by Mexico (White) and the Gadsden Purchase (Brown). Part of the area marked as Gadsden Purchase near modern-day Mesilla, New Mexico, was disputed after the Treaty. (1853)

  9. California and New Mexico • Discovery of gold in 1849 led U.S. Anglos to enter California • At the time of acquisition, the 50,000 Mexicans in what is now New Mexico had long maintained cultural traditions • Soon many lost their lands to invading whites

  10. PAST AND PRESENT IMMIGRATION • Immigrants include: • Those with official visas • Undocumented Immigrants or Illegals • Immigrants without legal immigration papers • Braceros • Seasonal farmers on contract • Commuters • Those with official visas that live in Mexico but work in U.S. • “Border Crossers” • Domestic workers with short-term permits

  11. Braceros and Undocumented Workers: Encouraging Immigration • 1924 Immigration Act; 1929 “illegal entry” is a felony • 1942 Emergency Farm Labor (Braceros) Agreement • Between U.S .and Mexico to provide Mexican workers for agriculture • Today they are not rural migrants but come from urban areas in Mexico • U.S. economy depends on immigrants from Latin America • “Backbone” of Dole, Green Giant, McDonalds, Burger King, Del Monte, etc.

  12. U.S. involvement in Latin America long involved U.S. government and major corporations • Most immigrants pulled by U.S. jobs • Pushed by serious economic problems • Maquiladoras (1960s) • Manufacturing operations in Northern Mexico near the U.S. border, where they can take advantage of low-wage labor and weak environmental standards while avoiding certain tariffs and duties

  13. On Maquiladoras… Corp Watch http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=1528 On vioence against women… Femicide along the border http://www.libertadlatina.org/Crisis_Lat_Mexico_Juarez_Femicide.htm

  14. NAFTA – North American Free Trade Agreement • Accelerated U.S. investment and manufacturing in Mexico • Approx 12 million undocumented • Most are temporary labor migrants caught by INS and do not intend to live in U.S. • Large reverse flow into Mexico goes unnoticed and unreported • Most pay more in income and other taxes than they receive in government benefits

  15. 1986 Immigration and Reform Control Act (IRCA) • Legalization of undocumented immigrants in U.S. since 1982 • Sanctions for employers who hire undocumented aliens • Reimbursement of government for cost of legalization • Screening of welfare applicants for migration status • Programs to bring in agricultural laborers • 1.7 of 3 million applications accepted

  16. 1996 Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA) • Established regulations restricting legal immigration as well as undocumented immigration • 2006 Secure Fence Act • Estimated to cost $35 billion • Increased number of border enforcement personnel and surveillance technology • Construction of physical barriers to Latin American immigrants including double-layered fence to be completed by 2008

  17. In a country of immigrants, a(nother) case of social closing: Arizona Senate Bill 1070 Signed into law April 23, 2010: It is the 1st state to demand that immigrants meet federal requirements to carry identity documents legitimizing their presence on American soil. An example of prejudice, discrimination, and xenophobia.

  18. Population and Location • “Latinos” - fastest growing major racial-ethnic segment of U.S. population. Approx 42 million. • Latino population in Los Angeles now larger than population of numerous states • More than one third of the residents of California, largest state • California and Texas have population majorities that are not European American

  19. Conflict and Protests Since the 1960s • Brown Berets, Chicano Movement • Chicano Studies departments • Cesar Chavez - (March 31, 1927 - April 23, 1993) Latino civil rights activist and founder of the United Farm Workers Delores C. Huerta (April 10, 1930 - )

  20. THE ECONOMY • Mexicans initially incorporated into U.S. economy by often violent conquest and takeovers of Mexican lands • Mexicans were original Vaqueros • Spanish word for cowboys • Late 1800s to early 1900s • Working conditions in agriculture were often severe and wages very low • Few whites competed for these jobs • Women concentrated in agriculture, domestic service, and manufacturing

  21. Continuing Language Discrimination • Language discrimination in workplace involves treating people unfairly because they speak language other than English • EEOC reports increase in complaints • Garcia v. Gloor (1981) • Supreme Court upheld firing an employee for speaking Spanish • Lawsuits over language discrimination more common in recent years • Language discrimination periodically draws protests from Latinos

  22. Unemployment, Poverty, and Income • Latino unemployment rates relatively high for decades • Mexican American incomes consistently low compared with whites • Poorest families include workers immigrated in recent decades with little education or economic capital • U.S. has predominantly service-worker economy with decreasing industrial jobs

  23. Recent research shows two divergent patterns of economic mobility • Earning of low-skilled, foreign-born Mexicans decrease as immigrants reside in U.S. longer • Earning of high-skilled, foreign born Mexicans increase as immigrants reside in U.S. longer • Movement of large numbers of immigrants into Latino communities buttressed local economies and maintained a demand for businesses that provide Latino goods and services • Extended family and strong cultural frameworks remain at core of communities

  24. Immigrant Workers:Targeted for Discrimination • Mexicans now neighbors of other Americans in all U.S. regions • Yet, other Americans treat them as outsiders • Growing numbers report housing and related discrimination by white neighbors • Housing discrimination plagues Latino families, both immigrants and established citizens • Patterns of discrimination led to Latinos living in Latino-majority neighborhoods

  25. POLITICS AND PROTEST • Before 1910 only a few hand-picked Latinos held office in territorial and state legislatures in the southwest • Gerrymandering in some districts diluted Latino voting strength and prevented election of Latino candidates • Voter registration and turnout of Latinos have risen over past three decades

  26. Growing Political Representation • Recent surveys indicate Latinos are committed to working together to increase political participation and political power • National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials Educational Fund • Empowerment organization for Latinos • Played major role in increasing Latino voter registration and turnout • Between 1960s and mid-200s number of Latinos in state legislatures increased significantly and are overwhelmingly Democrats

  27. The Courts and the Police • Mexican Americans long underrepresented in judicial system • First judge appointed in 1960s • All together, Latinos make up 11% of police but only 6% of first-line supervisors • 3.5% of lawyers and 6% of various judicial workers • Arizona, California, and Colorado require jurors to speak English, screening out many citizens • Recent survey found only 35% felt they receive fair outcome when dealing with the courts

  28. The Chicano Political Movement • Chicano Political Movement • Social movement that sought greater political power and less discrimination for Mexican Americans • La Raza Unida Party (LRUP) • Goals include significant representation in local governments and pressing latter to better serve Latino communities • Mexican American women held important roles in LRUP • Feminism easy because of woman’s traditional roles and strength as center of family

  29. Other Organization and Protest • Union organization has long history among Mexican Americans • 1st wasConfederacion de Uniones Obreras Mexicanas (CUOM) (1927) • American GI Forum • Formed after Texas cemetery refused to allow burial of a Mexican American WWII veteran • Chicanismo • A philosophy of self-esteem and antiracism • Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund (MALDEF) • Address problems of jury discrimination, police brutality, and school segregation

  30. Unions for Low-Wage Workers • Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AWOC) andNational Farm Workers Association (NFWA) • Created by Jessie Lopez, Dolores Huerta, and Cesar Chavez • Agricultural Labor Relations Act (1975) • Provided for protection of union activities • Many Mexican American and other farm workers still get low wages across the country • Increasing number members of mainstream unions

  31. Other Recent Challenges: Latinos and African Americans • Growing number of Latino population in urban areas have led to political conflict and cooperation with African Americans • Modern capitalism sometimes pits new immigrants against established citizens who rely on lower-wage blue-collar and service jobs • General political competition between Latinos and African Americans also generates conflict • White-controlled media focuses more on conflict and neglects cooperation

  32. EDUCATION • Mendez v. Westminster (1946) • Federal judge ruled that segregation of children in “Mexican schools” in California violated the 14th Amendment • Anticipated Supreme Court ruling in Brown v. Board of Education • For decades, some schools with high percentages of Latino students prohibited all manifestation of Mexican American subculture • “Six-hour retarded” • Functioned well in the outside world but mislabeled by school discrimination and poor testing

  33. Current Education Issues:Segregation and Bilingualism • 2000s, too many Mexican American children placed in learning-disabled classes, textbooks still neglect Mexican American history, and de facto racial segregation persists • Children with limited English proficiency become discouraged, develop low self-confidence, and fail to keep pace with English speakers • Myth propagated by nativists is that bilingual education is ineffective

  34. Educational Achievement • Mexican American attainment lowest of three Latino groups • Dropout / “pushout” rate is high • Poverty and need to earn money to help relatives is an obstacle • Education highly valued by students and their families • 9 out of 10 believe college education important • Steps to improve public education • Include Spanish language and Mexican American culture, involve parents, increase meaningful interaction between teachers and students

  35. ASSIMILATION OR INTERNAL COLONIALISM • Assimilation theorists • 10,000 initially brought by U.S. conquest • Most arrived later voluntarily and generally improved their economic circumstances relative to those in Mexico • Aspects of traditional culture have begun to disappear as acculturation proceeded • Yet, substantial degree of Mexican cultural heritage persists • Bilingualism • The ability to speak two languages

  36. One U.S. problem is structural • Private and public organizations do not now provide enough language training • Widespread use of English among immigrants underscores error of xenophobic calls for English-only laws and school policies • Structural assimilation, especially economic upward mobility, has come slowly for many • Behavior-receptional and attitude-receptional assimilation have varied considerably

  37. The Limits and Pacing of Assimilation • Structural assimilation or marital assimilation reached a high level • 1970s study revealed some intergroup friendship contacts • Significant numbers demonstrate movement toward identificational assimilation • Indicates diversity of opinion • Racial and ethnic identification varies with class, age, experience and whether self-defined or imposed

  38. Structural socioeconomic incorporation also limited • Ease of movement and incorporation into white institutions varies with perceived class and skin color • As long as there are major immigration streams from Mexico into Mexican American communities, traditional assimilation will be slowed • Latinos interested in developing or viewing their own mass media • Fastest growing television audience in 2000s

  39. Applying a Power-Conflict Perspective • Internal colonialism analysis • Mexican American history began with ruthless conquest of northern Mexico • Problem in applying traditional colonialism perspective • Most entered as voluntary immigrants after initial conquest • Most significant difference between Mexican and European immigrant experience • Intensive discrimination and cultural subordination of later Mexican immigrants in U.S.

  40. Mexican immigrants entered environment in which progress and mobility generally limited • Low wages, inferior schools, and various types of racialized discrimination • Internal colonialism analysts • White employers intentionally created a split labor market from which they received enormous profits • Power-conflict analysts • Emphasize continuing reality that majority of whites still see Mexicans as not white

  41. A Pan-Latino Identity • Anti-Latino discrimination has led many Mexican Americans to adopt a broader Hispanic or Latino identity • Collective Latino/Hispanic consciousness developed since 1960s • Pan-Latinoprocess emerged as a political strategy to accomplish political goals shared by component groups • Facilitated by shared language and similar home cultures

  42. Further Reading: Acuna, Rodolfo F. (2011), Occupied America: A History of Chicanos (7th ed.), Boston: Longman

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