阅读理解 There are nearly a million migrant workers in the United States. Most of them are Mexican Americans and black Americans. They go from state to state, from one farm to another, to pick fruit and vegetables. They work long hours but at night the
HIV and Mexican migrant workers in the United States: a review applying the vulnerable populations conceptual model. J Assoc Nurses AIDS. 2011;22(3):173-85.Cynthia R. Albarrán,Adeline Nyamathi.HIV and Mexican Migrant Workers in the United States: A Review Applying the Vulnerable Populations ...
Some characteristics of migrant workers in the United States of America in the 1930s in John Steibeck`s of Mice and MenAntonius Sudarisman
aIn the United States, migrant worker is commonly used to describe low-wage workers performing manual labor in the agriculture field; these are often illegal immigrants who do not have valid work visas. The United States has enacted the Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Workers Protection Act to ...
employment discriminationinvoluntary servitudeThis chapter argues that the combination of US employment and immigration laws create a system for the exploitation of immigrant workers that runs counter to thMaria L. OntiverosSocial Science Electronic Publishing...
y M. Donohoe (2010), "Historical and Contemporary Factors Contributing to the Plight of Migrant Farmworkers in the United Status" en Social Medicine, 5 (1), pp. 64-73.Koreishi, Safina y Martin Donohoe. 2010. Historical and contempo- rary factors contributing to the plight of migrant farm...
Migrant Workers In the past twenty years, there has been an increasing tendency for workers to move from one country to another. (1) some newly independent countries have understandably restricted most jobs to local people, others have attracted and welcomed migrant workers. This is particularly th...
Some migrant workers are American citizens of Mexican descent, while many others are illegal immigrants from south of the border. Most are males younger than age 30 and have less than eight years of schooling. In common with those of other countries, many migrant workers in the United States ...
This chapter discusses the impact of emigration on the sending countries. Emigration began as an economic need in a moment of distress, but it evolved to a point where the principal cause of emigration was—prior emigration. As the young people paid less attention to work on the land, so th...
Migratory workers in the USA are of mixed ethnic origin, including white Americans, Hispanics, Haitians, and Jamaicans. Some immigrant groups, such as Haitians, Mexicans, and Filipinos, have high rates of TB, and their work in agriculture may lead toto other farm workers. Migrant farm workers...