Title: Mexican%20Migration%20to%20the%20United%20States%20of%20America.
1Mexican Migration to the United States of America.
2Mexico USA BACKGROUND
- Napoleonic war ignites struggle for independence
- Struggle lasts ten years
- Treaty of Cordoba (1821)
- Mexico an independent state)
3Mexican Colonization Law(1820 1830)
- Texas in 1820 4,000 Mexicans
- Solicited immigrants from USA
- American immigrants could receive a League
Labor of land if they - Became Mexican citizens.
- Obeyed Mexican laws.
- Converted to Catholicism
- Slavery was illegal
4Tensions lead to war Independence
- April 6, 1830 - the Mexican government forbids
further American emigration to Texas. - 1835 - October 9, the Battle of Goliad takes
place and ends with a victory for Texas. - On December 11, the Seige of Bexar ends with the
Texans capturing Santa Anna Mexican president
5Mexican/American Relations
- Mexican American War (1846 -48)
- Set in motion by US annexation of Texas
- Fighting was one-sided
- Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848)
- Mexico loses 40 of territory
- Mexicans living in territory become U.S. citizens
- U.S. pays 15 million for territory acquired
6U.S. Dominates North America
7Caribbean Basin
8The Great Depression
- High unemployment rates led to hostility towards
Mexican immigrants - Deportation but situation is Mexico is worse
- Migrant work camps established by U.S. Farm
Security Administration - Provided necessities
- Protection
- Sense of community
9Migration Continues despite legal prohibitions
- Tensions
- Ethnic groups in U. S. react to growing Mexican
community in the cities - Zoot Suit Riot in L.A. (1942)
10World War II Immigration from Mexico tolerated
- Factories lit up to support war effort
- Need low-cost agricultural labor
- Bracero joint program between U.S. and Mexico
to contract laborers for these jobs - Popular with farmers
- 5 million Mexicans came as braceros
- Once war ended, U.S. deported 4 million
immigrants back to Mexico, again - This was a larger deportation than during the
Depression
11 lure of Jobs reignites immigration from Mexico
- Bracero Program (1950-964) Mexicans continue
their working relationship with US farmers. - Maquiladora program -
- Factories within 50 miles of U.S. border given
tariff preferences - developed to curtail the job incentive for new
immigration - Higher US wages continued to attract migrants
- Immigration act of 1987
- Intended to ensure that Mexican workers here were
legal - Failure to close border led to increased
immigration
12Mexican Immigration Surges
- Present currently 20 million legal residents of
Mexican heritage in U.S. - 1990s more legal immigrants came from Mexico
than all European countries combined - Illegal immigration surges (10 million plus)
- Mexican-Americans influence culture in USA
- Communication UNAVISION
- Jobs in most professions
- Public office (Sonia Sotomayor Supreme Court )
- Projections within two generations, over 25 of
the U.S. residents will be of Mexican origin
largest part Mexican
13The Wage Comparison
- The minimum wage in Mexico is about 57 cents an
hour. About 12.5 times less than that in the USA. - This offers a huge incentive for immigrants to
come here to work and send money home to their
impoverished families. - Economic crisis in Mexico in 1994 exacerbated the
wage differential.
14Economic Crisis of 1994
- Devaluation of the Mexican peso
- Occurred on the watch of Mexican President Carlos
Salinas Gortari - Insurgent rebellion in Chipas shook the nation
15Lack of Foresight
- De Gortari launched a high spending splurge
- Lax banking surrounded the government loan
- 20 over specualation of the Peso
16Recovery/Aid
- NAFTA almost derailed
- 50 billion dollars in loans/aid issued mostly
from the U. S. - Loans quickly repaid, but recovery difficult
- Wages fell sharply
17Effects on Population Movement
- Migration to the U.S. (much of it illegal)
increased - Family connections channeled new migrants
- The more Mexican people that migrate, the larger
the network becomes - Many Mexican women migrate after their husbands
have established themselves n the U.S.
18Effects on Population Movement Women
- Female migration to the United States increased
- Rapidly catching up with the number of male
migrants - Low paying jobs (seamstress, maids)
- Prostitution
- U.S. role dates back to prohibition
- Relatively high-paying - 100 per day)
- Violence remains a concern
19Mexican Migration What is Unique?
- While the United States is a nation of
immigrants, we have never has one foreign
nationality come in so rapidly and in such
numbers - Potential to change U.S. culture and institutions
is unprecedented