Wednesday, January 22, 2020

The Role of Mexican-American Border Relations in the Political Process

The Role of Mexican-American Border Relations in the Political Process Throughout the 1990’s up until the present, Mexican-American political relations have been very inconsistent in their endeavors to define what the relationship should and will be between the two different countries. The massive influx of Mexican immigrants has commanded attention from the governments of both countries. This has resulted in attempts to make a working partnership acknowledging the fact that the peoples of Mexican decent have grown into the largest minority group in the United States and there are many issues to be hammered out by both countries in establishing just economic and political relations. However this effort has encountered many setbacks and questions of dedication to a working relationship between Mexico and the United States both in the past and currently. Politicians who once jumped on the bandwagon of demonizing Mexican Americans are now fronting to be their closest allies and representatives in order to gain there votes in reelection. Who were once a people solely confined to the lowest of economic class and labor, are slowly working their ways into the higher classes and employment opportunities. Conservative citizens prejudiced attitudes towards Mexicans is balanced out by liberal populations as well. While poor economic times and difficulty in finding employment tend to point fingers at populations like the Mexican immigrants, there is still a need for the cheap labor in the fields and factories to keep production moving. The list of contradictions goes on and on and this complex issue will remain one for years. The goal of this paper is to address Mexican-American relations of the past and the present, and to pr... ...beth. Making Labor Flexible: The Recomposition of Tijuana's Maquiladora Female Labor Force. Feminist Economics 6, no. 3 (2000), 59-79. Global Exchange. Maquiladoras: Sweatshops by any other name. http://www.globalexchange.org/education/california/DayOfTheDead/maqui ladoras .html Guskind, Robert. â€Å"Border Backlash.† National Journal 4 June 1994: 1296-1299. Muller, Henry. â€Å"There is a Limit to What We Call Absorbant.† Time 18 Nov. 1991: 54-63 Natives: Immigrant Bashing on the Border. Film â€Å"Powell says U.S. eager for immigration agreement with Mexico† (Cnn.com) 30 May 2003. Rodriquez, Cindy. â€Å"Tamales no substitute for a place on podium.† Globe. 12 August, 2000.

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