Publication | Closed Access
The Settlement Process Among Mexican Migrants to the United States
189
Citations
20
References
1986
Year
Human MigrationEthnicitySocial StratificationUnited StatesMexican MigrantsU.s. SettlementLabor MigrationMarket IntegrationPublic HealthMigration PolicyMexican HistoryEconomicsMexican American StudiesSociologyMass ImmigrationTransnational MobilityAnthropologyMigrant WorkerDemographyArtsImmigrant HealthImmigration
Over time migrants bring family members abroad, make new friends, establish institutional connections, and obtain more stable, better‑paying jobs. The report examines the integration and settlement process of Mexican migrants to the U.S. using data from four Mexican sending communities. Data were specially collected from these four sending communities to analyze the settlement process. Accumulated experience in the U.S.
This report examines the process of integration and settlement among Mexican migrants to the United States using data specially collected from four Mexican sending communities. These data indicate that as migrants accumulate experience in the United States social and economic ties are formed which progressively increase the likelihood of U.S. settlement. Over time migrants bring family members abroad make new friends establish institutional connections and obtain more stable better paying jobs. As a result less money is remitted home to Mexico and more is spent in the United States. These trends give rise to a steady cumulative increase in the probability of U.S. settlement. (EXCERPT)
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