Mexico and Its Diaspora in the United States : Policies of Emigration Since 1848.
Materialtyp:
TextUtgivningsuppgift: New York : Cambridge University Press, 2011Datum för upphovsrätt: ©2011Utgåva: 1st edBeskrivning: 1 online resource (304 pages)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781139115834
- 325/.2720973
Cover -- Half-title -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Engaging the Mexican Diaspora -- SENDING STATES' INTERESTS -- A MULTILEVEL ANALYSIS -- THE MEXICAN CASE -- A FOREIGN POLICY PERSPECTIVE -- INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORY AND EMIGRATION POLICIES -- METHODOLOGY -- OVERVIEW -- 1 The Mexican States Interests -- A Multilevel Analysis -- UNITED STATES-MEXICO RELATIONS AND MEXICAN EMIGRATION POLICIES -- CHANGES IN FOREIGN POLICY AND EMIGRATION POLICIES FROM THE 1980S -- THE MEXICAN STATES INTERESTS -- Domestic Factors -- Transnational Factors -- International Factors -- 2 The Consolidation of the Mexican State and the Safety Valve of Emigration (1848-1942) -- 1848-1910: TOWARD THE CONSOLIDATION OF THE MEXICAN STATE -- Consular Protection without Confrontation -- The First Mexican Migrant Organizations -- Responses to Emigration and Immigration in Mexico -- 1910-1942: THE REVOLUTIONARY STATE -- "Mexicanization" and Nonintervention -- Ambivalent Responses to Emigration -- Expanding Consular Activity -- Repatriations and Bilateral Relations -- CONCLUSIONS -- 3 From the Bracero Agreements to Delinkage (1942-1982) -- 1942-1964: THE BRACERO AGREEMENTS -- Compliance and Dispute Resolution: The Sending States Vulnerability -- After the War: The Bracero Program as a Safety Valve -- Regaining the Advantage? The Bracero Program and the Korean War -- The Unraveling of the Bracero Program -- Responses to Changes in Migration Patterns -- 1965-1982: FROM COOPERATION TO LIMITED ENGAGEMENT -- The Policy of Having No Policy -- Echeverría and the Chicano Movement -- Responses to the Growth of Mexican Emigration -- The Relevance of Delinkage: Negotiating on Oil and Migration -- Emigration in a Context of Economic Changes -- CONCLUSIONS.
4 From a Policy of Having No Policy to a Nation beyond Mexicos Borders (1982-2000) -- THE EFFECTS OF ECONOMIC LIBERALIZATION ON MEXICAN FOREIGN POLICY (1982-1988) -- MEXICOS REACTION TO THE IRCA: THE LOGIC OF LIMITED ENGAGEMENT -- ADAPTING MIGRATION POLICIES TO A NEW BILATERAL CONTEXT (1988-2000) -- THE NAFTA NEGOTIATIONS: IMPLICATIONS FOR MEXICOS FOREIGN POLICY -- OPEN BORDERS TO COMMERCIAL FLOWS, CLOSED BORDERS TO IMMIGRATION -- REDEFINING "NONINTERVENTION" IN STATE-DIASPORA RELATIONS -- REDEFINING "NONINTERVENTION" IN RESPONSES TO U.S. POLICIES -- CONCLUSIONS -- 5 The Migration Agreement (2000-2003) -- REINTERPRETING MEXICOS FOREIGN POLICY -- THE PROPOSAL FOR A MIGRATION AGREEMENT -- MEXICOS INITIATIVE: A MOVE AWAY FROM DELINKAGE -- THE NEGOTIATION OF THE MIGRATION AGREEMENT -- BREAKDOWN OF THE DISCUSSIONS, YET MEXICO PERSEVERES -- CONTINUING TO LOBBY FOR IMMIGRATION REFORM -- FROM MIGRATION AGREEMENT TO COMPREHENSIVE IMMIGRATION REFORM -- MATRíCULAS CONSULARES: BROADENING THE DEFINITION OF "CONSULAR PROTECTION -- TOWARD AN EXPLICIT POSITION ON IMMIGRATION -- CONCLUSIONS -- 6 Institutionalizing State-Diaspora Relations (2003-2006) -- THE INSTITUTE OF MEXICANS ABROAD -- THE IMES SERVICES: IMPROVING MIGRANTS' LIVES - AND THEIR INTEGRATION IN THE UNITED STATES -- Education -- Health -- Leadership Development -- ABSENTEE VOTING RIGHTS: EMPOWERING MIGRANTS AT HOME AND ABROAD -- LIMITS: THE LEGACY OF NONINTERVENTION -- CONCLUSIONS -- Conclusions -- CHANGES IN MEXICOS EMIGRATION POLICIES: THE VALUE OF A MULTILEVEL ANALYSIS -- THE UNITED STATES-MEXICO RELATIONSHIP: BEYOND POWER ASYMMETRY? -- THE CURRENT CONTEXT (2006-2010) -- SENDING STATES: DEEPENING EXPLANATIONS AT THE INTERNATIONAL LEVEL -- MIGRATION AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS -- Bibliography -- Index.
This book examines how the Mexican government's assessment of the possibilities and consequences of implementing certain emigration policies from 1848 to 2010 has been tied to changes in the bilateral relationship, which remains a key factor in Mexico's current development of strategies and policies in relation to migrants in the United States.
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2025. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Licensed e-book