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Mason, Bert; Alvarado, Andrew; Palacio, Robert – 1996
This paper examines the social and economic impacts of Mexican immigration on Fresno (California). Since the early 1980s, immigration to California has been dominated by illegal immigrants from rural Mexico seeking agricultural jobs in rural California. This rural migration impacts urban centers in agricultural regions; these impacts lag the…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Agricultural Laborers, Community Change, Educational Attainment
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Saenz, Rogelio; Greenlees, Clyde S. – International Migration Review, 1999
Analyzes the determinants of employment among Mexican-origin women who immigrated to the United States in the 1980s. Derives nine hypotheses from the analytical model and examines them through logistic regression. Results support seven hypotheses, including one about the women's educational background. (SLD)
Descriptors: Educational Background, Employment Opportunities, Employment Patterns, Females
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Crowley, Martha; Lichter, Daniel T.; Qian, Zhenchao – Family Relations, 2006
We used data from the Integrated Public Use Microdata Samples to document poverty rates among native-born and foreign-born Mexicans living in the southwest and in new regions where many Mexican families have resettled. Our analysis focused on how changing patterns of employment have altered the risk of poverty among Mexican families and children.…
Descriptors: Poverty, Immigrants, Mexicans, Employment Patterns
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Mora, Marie T.; Davila, Alberto – International Migration Review, 2000
Analyzes whether English skills differently affect earnings and occupational sorting of border versus non-border Mexican Americans, examining areas with predominantly language minority residents and with English-dominant residents. Results find comparable English deficiency earnings penalties for Mexican immigrants, suggesting that they respond to…
Descriptors: Employment Opportunities, Employment Patterns, English (Second Language), Immigrants
SEGALMAN, RALPH – 1966
AN ANALYSIS OF THE LIVES OF THE POOR IN AMERICA WILL SHOW DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE IMMIGRANT (AND REFUGEE) POOR AND THE RESIDUAL POOR (NEGROES, PUERTO RICANS, LATIN AMERICANS, INDIANS, AND OTHERS). THE IMMIGRANT POOR WERE ACCULTURATED AND ABSORBED INTO THE MAINSTREAM OF AMERICAN LIFE WITHIN THREE GENERATIONS, WHEREAS THE RESIDUAL POOR HAVE BEEN…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indians, Blacks, Community Role
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Sullivan, Teresa A. – International Migration Review, 1984
Analysis of data on the occupational prestige of women workers in Cuba or Mexico who immigrated to the United States showed that immigrant women do not fare so well as immigrant men in converting their resources into occupational prestige. Differences between Mexican and Cuban women, however, are larger than gender differences. (KH)
Descriptors: Cubans, Employment Patterns, Females, Hispanic Americans
De Anda, Roberto M. – 2000
This paper compares the causes and consequences of employment instability among Mexican-origin women, White women, and White men. Data came from the work experience supplement in the March 1995 file of the Current Population Survey for a sample that included 1,399 Mexican-origin women, 17,092 White women, and 24,440 White men. All were experienced…
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Educational Attainment, Educational Status Comparison, Employment Patterns
Mendoza, Marcela – 2002
This report examines the growing Latino population in Memphis and surrounding Shelby County (Tennessee), focusing on demography, Latino workers in the local economy, and a study of the needs and concerns of Hispanic immigrant women. The Hispanic population increased by 229 percent in Shelby County in the 1990s. In 2000, about half of the county's…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Demography, Educational Needs, Employment Patterns
Thomas-Breitfeld, Sean – 2003
This brief analyzes the employment patterns and socioeconomic characteristics of Latinos. Nationally, Hispanics constitute 11.1 percent of the U.S. workforce. The number of Latino workers is expected to grow by 36.3 percent this decade. Working Latinos have persistently had high poverty and unemployment rates due to such factors as insufficient…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Employment Level, Employment Patterns, Hispanic Americans
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Alaniz, Maria Luisa; Cartmill, Randi S.; Parker, Robert Nash – Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 1998
Examination of neighborhood-level data from three northern California communities with large immigrant populations found that youth violence was not related to percentage of immigrants in the neighborhood population. Youth violence was positively related to alcohol availability and percentage of divorced adults, and negatively related to…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Alcoholic Beverages, Blacks, Community Characteristics
Aponte, Robert; Siles, Marcelo – 1994
This report provides a Latino-focused assessment of the changing demographic and economic landscape of the Midwest between 1980 and 1990. Over 56 percent of the region's population increase was accounted for by Latinos, of which persons of Mexican origin were the largest proportion. The White population decreased by over 300,000 persons, with the…
Descriptors: Census Figures, Demography, Economic Change, Educational Attainment
Espenshade, Thomas J.; Goodis, Tracy Ann – 1985
This paper summarizes the results of a study of the impact of immigration on California, particularly in Los Angeles County. Of the 1.7 million foreign-born persons in Los Angeles County in 1980, 950,000 (or 57 percent) came to the United States after 1970. Mexican immigrants comprise almost one-half of the total of recent arrivals. They tend to…
Descriptors: Blue Collar Occupations, Demography, Educational Attainment, Employment Opportunities
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bean, Frank; And Others – International Migration Review, 1984
Uses 1980 Public Use Microfiles to delineate four Mexican-origin immigrant status groups--post-1975 Mexican-born noncitizens, pre-1975 Mexican-born noncitizens, self-reported naturalized citizens, and native-born Mexican Americans. Argues that the pattern of sociodemographic differences reveals that the first two categories contain a substantial…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Data Analysis, Demography, Educational Background
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Taeuber, Karl E. – 1976
This report reviews recent population and manpower projections and examines how they take into account certain unexpected shifts in demographic, social, and economic behavior. It also assesses how well the particular circumstances, trends, and problems of the nation's major minority groups have been brought into the purview of the projection…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Blacks, Demography, Employment Patterns
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Stier, Haya; Tienda, Marta – International Migration Review, 1992
Results from analyses of census data for 997 immigrant Mexican wives, 347 Puerto Ricans, and 405 other Hispanics in comparison with 1,210 native-born counterparts and 8,766 white wives indicate that the labor force behavior of Hispanic wives is highly responsive to their earning potential. (SLD)
Descriptors: Census Figures, Cultural Differences, Economic Factors, Employment Patterns
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