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MEXICAN AMERICANS AND PUERTO RICANS

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Title: MEXICAN AMERICANS AND PUERTO RICANS


1
MEXICAN AMERICANS AND PUERTO RICANS
  • CHAPTER 10

2
Mexican Americans
  • Legacy of war created Americas two largest
    Hispanic minorities
  • Mexican Americans and Puerto Ricans
  • The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, February 2, 1848
  • Under the treaty the new Americans were
    guaranteed rights to property and their cultural
    traditions.
  • The loss of land and the lack of legal protection
    after the treaty

3
  • US gained Texas, California, Arizona, ad New
    Mexico for 15 million
  • In exchange, US granted citizenship to 75,000
    Mexican nationals
  • Guaranteed
  • Religious freedom
  • Property rights
  • Cultural integrity
  • Right to continue Mexican and Spanish cultural
    traditions and to use the Spanish language
  • Land conflict between Anglo ranchers and
    Mexican-American ranchers
  • Mexican-Americans became outsiders in their own
    land

4
The Immigrant Experience
  • Immigration from Mexico is unique in several
    respects
  • Continuous large-scale movement for most of this
    century
  • Proximity of Mexico encourages past immigrants to
    maintain strong cultural and language ties
  • Aura of illegality that surrounded Mexican
    migrants
  • Suspicion of Anglos toward Mexicans contributed
    to mutual distrust

5
  • Mexican immigration has been tied closely to the
    economies of Mexico and the United States
  • US corporations invested in Mexico in a way that
    maximized profits but minimized money remaining
    in Mexico to provide needed employment
  • Mexican workers are used as cheap laborers in
    their own country by fellow Mexicans and
    Americans or as undocumented workers here

6
  • Repatriation
  • Program of deporting Mexicans during depression
    of 1930s
  • Constitutional because only illegal aliens were
    to be deported
  • Many classified as illegal had resided in US for
    decades
  • Braceros
  • Program between Mexico and US allowing migration
    across border by contracted laborers
  • Mexicans regarded as positive presence when useful

7
  • Operation Wetback and Special Force Operation
    (1954)
  • Crackdown on illegal aliens
  • Mojados
  • Derisive slang for Mexicans who enter illegally
    and refers to those who secretly swim across Rio
    Grande
  • The Mexican American Legal Defense and Education
    Fund (MALDEF)
  • Expressed concern over handling of illegal aliens

8
The Economic Picture
  • Mexican Americans and Puerto Ricans
  • Higher unemployment rates, higher rates of
    poverty, and significantly lower incomes than
    Whites
  • The Culture of Poverty
  • Embraces a deviant way of life that involves no
    future planning, no enduring commitment to
    marriage, and absence of work ethic
  • Developed by Oscar Lewis
  • Cultural traits as the cause of poverty
  • Blaming the victim
  • Used indiscriminately to explain continued poverty

9
  • César Chavez
  • Formed National Farm Workers Association
  • Became United Farm Workers (UFW)
  • Difficulties of organizing migrant farm workers
  • No savings for organizing or to live on while on
    strike
  • Growers relied on limitless supply of Mexican
    laborers to replace strikers
  • Opposition by agribusiness and lawmakers
  • 70 lack health insurance and make less than
    10,000/year

10
Political Organizations
  • La Raza Unida (LRU)
  • Pride in ones Spanish, Native American and
    Mexican heritage.
  • Supported candidates who offer alternatives to
    the Democratic and Republican parties
  • Chicanismo (Chicanozaje)
  • Stress a positive self-image and place little
    reliance on conventional forms of political
    activity

11
  • Reies Lopez Tijerina (1963)
  • Formed the Alianza Federal de Mercedes (Federal
    Alliance of Land Grants)
  • Purpose of the organization was to recover lost
    land
  • Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund
    (MALDEF) 1967
  • Pursue issues through the courts and protect
    Mexican Americans constitutional rights
  • Addressed segregation, biased testing, inequities
    in school financing, and failure to promote
    bilingualism

12
Puerto Ricans
  • Borinquen (Puerto Rico) claimed by Spain in 1493
  • Native inhabitants, Taino Indians
  • Reduced in number by conquest, slavery, and
    genocide
  • Puerto Rico was annexed by the United States from
    Spain after the the Spanish-American War of 1898
  • Puerto Rico has been a United States colony since
    1898 (Commonwealth Status since 1948)
  • Puerto Ricans have been subjected to bureaucratic
    (Political) control by the United States

13
  • Colonization of Puerto Ricans
  • Politically, then culturally, and finally
    economically
  • Jones Act of 1917
  • Citizenship extended to Puerto Ricans
  • Remained a colony
  • 1948
  • Elected its own governor and became a
    commonwealth
  • Cannot vote in presidential elections and have no
    voting representations
  • Subject to military service, Selective Service
    registration, and all federal laws

14
The Bridge Between the Island and the Mainland
  • Despite citizenship, occasionally challenged by
    immigration officials
  • Other Latin Americans attempt to enter country
    posing as Puerto Ricans
  • Push and pull factors led to migration from the
    Island to the mainland
  • Underdeveloped and overpopulated island, absence
    of legal restrictions, growth of cheap air
    transportation, and Puerto Rican communities (New
    York City) on the mainland

15
  • Neoricans
  • Term the islanders use for Puerto Ricans in New
    York
  • Better educated and have more money than Puerto
    Ricans from the Island
  • Often resented by long time Islanders
  • Now more dispersed throughout the mainland
  • Sizable numbers in New Jersey, Illinois, Florida,
    California, Pennsylvania, and Connecticut

16
The Island of Puerto Rico
  • Original inhabitants, Taino Indians, wiped out in
    a couple of generations
  • Disease, tribal warfare, hard labor, unsuccessful
    rebellions against the Spanish, and fusion with
    their conquerors
  • Neocolonialism
  • Refers to continuing dependence of former
    colonies on foreign countries
  • English and Spanish are the official languages

17
  • Statehood and Self-Rule
  • Puerto Ricans periodically argued and fought for
    independence
  • Contemporary commonwealth arrangement is popular
    with many, others prefer statehood, and some call
    for complete independence from the US
  • Idea of statehood invokes fear of higher taxes,
    erosion of cultural heritage, end of separate
    participation in Olympics and Miss Universe
    pageant
  • Commonwealth supporters argue too many unknown
    costs, so embrace status quo
  • Others view statehood as key to increased
    economic development and expansion for tourism

18
  • Arguments for and against independence
  • Probably economic
  • Independent Puerto Rico would not be required to
    use US shipping lines, more expensive than
    foreign competitors
  • Independent Puerto Rico might be faced with a
    tariff wall when trading with its largest
    customer, the mainland US
  • Puerto Rican migration to mainland would be
    restricted
  • 50 favor commonwealth 47 backed statehood
    less than 3 favor independence
  • Discontent remains a colonial dilemma

19
Social Construction of Race
  • Color Gradient
  • Describes distinctions based on skin color made
    on a continuum rather than by sharp categorical
    separations
  • Reflects past fusion between different groups
  • Rather than being black or white, such
    societies judge as lighter or darker than
    others
  • On the Island factors such as social class
    determine race
  • On the mainland race is more likely to determine
    social class

20
The Island Economy
  • Overall economy well below that of poorest areas
    of the US
  • Federal government exempted US industries in
    Puerto Rico from taxes on profits for at least 10
    years
  • Enterprise Zones
  • Federal program that grants tax incentives to
    promote private investment in inner cities
  • Extended to Puerto Rico
  • Islands agriculture ignored and economic
    benefits to the island are limited
  • Business profits returned to the mainland

21
  • Unemployment is three times that of mainland
  • Per capita income is less than half of
    Mississippi, the poorest state
  • Puerto Rico emerging as major gateway to US for
    illegal drugs from South America
  • World Systems Theory
  • View of the global economic system as divided
    between certain industrialized nations that
    control wealth and developing countries that are
    controlled and exploited

22
  • Major factors in Puerto Ricos economy
  • Tourism
  • Government subsidies encouraged construction of
    luxury hotels
  • Criticisms
  • Major economic beneficiaries are investors from
    the mainland not locals
  • High prices prevent less affluent from visiting,
    unnecessarily restricting tourism
  • NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement)
  • Reduction of trade barriers and its lower wages
    undercut Puerto Ricos commonwealth advantage
  • Other island nations compete for tourist dollars

23
The Contemporary Picture of Mexican Americans and
Puerto Ricans
  • Education
  • Mexican Americans and Puerto Ricans experienced
    gains in formal schooling but still lag behind
    Whites
  • 1968 55 of all Hispanics attended
    predominantly minority schools
  • 30 years later, increased to 76
  • Over 1/3rd of Latinos in schools that were at
    least 90 non-White

24
  • 3 factors of increasing social isolation of
    Mexican Americans and Puerto Ricans
  • Latinos are increasingly concentrated in largest
    cities where minorities dominate
  • Latino numbers increased dramatically since
    1970s when school desegregation began to lose
    momentum
  • Schools once desegregated have become
    re-segregated
  • Tracking
  • Practice of placing students in specific classes
    or curriculum based on test scores and other
    criteria

25
  • Family Life
  • Most important organization or social institution
    among Latinos or any group
  • Structure differs little from that of all
    families in US
  • Familism
  • Means pride and closeness in the family, which
    results in family obligation and loyalty coming
    before individual needs
  • Expected to decline in importance with
    urbanization, industrialization, and acquisition
    of middle-class status
  • Display variety of American family in general
    while suffering higher levels of poverty

26
  • Health Care
  • Life Chances limited for Latinos
  • Peoples opportunities to provide themselves with
    material goods, positive living conditions, and
    favorable life experiences
  • Hispanics as a group are locked out of health
    care system more often than any other racial or
    ethnic group
  • Complicated by lack of Hispanic health care
    professionals
  • Curanderismo
  • Latino folk medicine, form of holistic health
    care and healing
  • Culture makes them less likely to use medical
    system

27
  • Religion
  • Predominantly Catholic
  • Church took assimilationist role in past
  • Recently, more community oriented
  • Hispanic population growth important for the
    church
  • Some churches starting to accommodate observances
    of Mexican rituals
  • Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead)
  • Pentecostalism
  • Type of evangelical Christianity growing in Latin
    America

28
QUESTIONS
29
  • In what respects has Mexico been viewed as a
    source of workers and a place to leave unwanted
    laborers?

30
  • Using the functionalist perspective, will the
    current exploitation of Mexican labor in Mexico
    by American corporations and the Mexican
    government eventually lead to an improved economy
    and living conditions for Mexicans? Explain your
    answer.

31
  • In what respects are Hispanic families similar to
    and different from Anglo households?

32
  • How does Chicanismo relate to the issue of
    Hispanic identity?

33
  • How does the case of Puerto Rico support the
    notion of race as a social concept?

34
  • What role does religion play in the Latino
    community?

35
  • Churches have become reliant on the growing
    Latino population to replenish their
    congregations. Based on the changes in religious
    values currently noted in American culture, will
    the religiosity of Latinos remain the same as
    they assimilate more into American culture?
    Explain your answer.
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