Latino Immigrants and Rural Gentrification: Race, “Illegality,” and Precarious Labor Regimes in the United States

Lise Nelson, Laurie Trautman, P. Nelson
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引用次数: 33

Abstract

This article examines the emergence of immigrant-based precarious labor regimes in U.S. rural areas undergoing gentrification. Drawing on field-based research in rural Georgia and Colorado, we explore how Latino and Latina immigrant workers were recruited to places that had been largely off the map of Latino immigrant settlement prior to the late 1990s to work in service and construction employment stimulated by gentrification. We trace evolving recruitment and labor practices that drew on hierarchies of race and “illegality” to fundamentally improve the productivity and profitability of gentrification-linked sectors. Key to this process was the active recruitment of Latino workers in the 1990s and early 2000s (usually recruited off subcontracted crews hired out from distant metropolitan areas) and the establishment of personal relations of loyalty and dependence between those workers and their white bosses. Over time, these personal relationships often produced informal labor brokers for business owners, brokers who facilitated access to immigrant networks necessary for further recruitment of immigrant workers and critical to producing the high degree of flexibility and discipline that began to characterize these emerging labor regimes. Our analysis makes two key theoretical contributions. First, by exploring how precarious labor regimes become instantiated into rural spaces we decenter the urban in our understanding of these regimes as theorized by Theodore and others. Second, we highlight the importance of attending to the imbrication of class, race, and “illegality” in rural gentrification research.
拉丁裔移民和农村中产阶级化:美国的种族、“非法”和不稳定的劳工制度
这篇文章探讨了移民为基础的不稳定的劳动制度在美国农村地区正在经历士绅化的出现。通过对佐治亚州和科罗拉多州农村地区的实地研究,我们探讨了拉丁裔和拉丁裔移民工人是如何被招募到20世纪90年代末之前基本上没有拉丁裔移民定居的地方,在中产阶级化刺激下从事服务业和建筑业就业的。我们追溯了不断演变的招聘和劳工实践,这些实践利用种族等级和“非法”,从根本上提高了与中产阶级化相关部门的生产率和盈利能力。这个过程的关键是在20世纪90年代和21世纪初积极招募拉丁裔工人(通常是从遥远的大都市地区雇佣的分包工人中招募的),并在这些工人和白人老板之间建立忠诚和依赖的个人关系。随着时间的推移,这些私人关系经常为企业主产生非正式的劳工经纪人,这些经纪人促进了移民网络的进入,这是进一步招聘移民工人所必需的,对于产生高度的灵活性和纪律性至关重要,而这正是这些新兴劳工制度的特征。我们的分析做出了两个关键的理论贡献。首先,通过探索不稳定的劳动力制度是如何在农村空间中具体化的,我们在理解这些制度时将城市去中心化了,这是西奥多和其他人理论化的。其次,我们强调了在农村高档化研究中关注阶级、种族和“非法性”的重要性。
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