劳务承包商、郊狼和旅行者:拉丁美洲和美国南部的移民产业

D. Griffith
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在20世纪90年代,社会学和人类学的移民研究人员不成比例地关注跨国主义的概念,导致对跨国养育、侨民政治和身份、灵活的公民身份、社会汇款和其他影响国际移民经历的因素等至关重要的现象进行调查。这项工作还对两个或两个以上国家的家庭和社区进行了全面的民族志描述,描绘了基于经济机会、文化交流和社会网络在发送和接收社区之间建立动态关系的人们。本文提出的观点对跨国主义提供了一个略微不同的视角,考察了在劳务承包商、人贩子(郊狼)和经常在移民发送和接收社区之间运送货物的旅行者周围出现的有管理的移民和移民产业。虽然这个行业促进了跨国主义,但就像跨国主义一样,它最终是一个比国际移民更全面的过程的症状:资本对高度灵活的劳动力的渴望,这种劳动力可以季节性地扩张和收缩,并根据经济增长和衰退的时期做出反应,高度流动,并且在很大程度上与生殖环境分离。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Labor Contractors, Coyotes, and Travelers: The migration industry in Latin America and the U.S. South
During the 1990s, migration researchers in sociology and anthropology focused disproportionately on the idea of transnationalism, leading to investigations of critically important phenomena such as transnational parenting, diaspora politics and identity, flexible citizenship, social remittances, and other factors influencing the experiences of international migrants.  This work also produced comprehensive ethnographic accounts of families and communities with attachments to places in two or more countries, profiling peoples who had forged dynamic relations between sending and receiving neighborhoods based on economic opportunities, cultural exchanges, and social networks.  The argument presented here offers a slightly different perspective on transnationalism, examining managed migration and the migration industry that has emerged around labor contractors, human smugglers (coyotes), and travelers who routinely carry goods between migrant sending and receiving communities.  While this industry facilitates transnationalism, like transnationalism it is ultimately a symptom of a process more comprehensive than international migration: capital’s desire for a highly flexible labor force that expands and contractsseasonally and in response to periods of economic growth and decline, is highly mobile, and is largely separated from reproductive settings.
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