基本説明
Using Dominicans in New York City as a case study, Hernández challenges the old belief that workers necessarily migrate from one region to another because of supply and demand.
Full Description
What explains the international mobility of workers from developing to advanced societies? Why do workers move from one region to another? Theoretically, the supply of workers in a given region and the demand for them in another account for the international mobility of laborers. Job seekers from less developed regions migrate to more advanced countries where technological and productive transformations have produced a shortage of laborers. Using the Dominican labor force in New York as a case study, Ramona Hernandez challenges this presumption of a straightforward relationship between supply and demand in the job markets of the receiving society. She contends that the traditional correlation between migration and economic progress does not always hold true. Once transplanted in New York City, Hernandez shows, Dominicans have faced economic hardship as the result of high levels of unemployment and underemployment and the reality of a changing labor market that increasingly requires workers with skills and training they do not have.
Rather than responding to a demand in the labor market, emigration from the Dominican Republic was the result of a de facto government policy encouraging poor and jobless people to leave-a policy in which the United States was an accomplice because the policy suited its economic and political interests in the region.
Contents
List of Tables Acknowledgments Introduction Part 1. Leaving the Land of the Few 1. The Great Exodus: Its Roots 2. Economic Growth and Surplus Population Part 2. Settling in the Land of Dreams 3. The Perception of a Migratory Movement 4. Dominicans in the Labor Market 5. On the International Mobility of Labor 6. Conclusion: Assessing the Present and Auguring the Future Appendix: Figures Notes Works Cited Index