Description

Book Synopsis
Understanding the process of becoming legal from the perspective of an immigrant community

Trade Review
"This book makes an important contribution to the debate over immigration. It is theoretically sophisticated, particularly in its analysis of immigration and legalization as processes rather than definitive decisions, in its recognition that immigrants vary in the cultural and social capital that they bring, and in making clear that immigration means different things for men and for women. The empirical research is unusually rich since it is based on three years of intensive field work in which Hagan followed closely the decisions that her informants made with respect to staying or returning and taking advantage of the legalization provisions of the Immigration Reform and Control Act. The result is a fascinating account of how Maya Indians from Guatemala have adjusted to life in the post-industrial world of Houston. As one of the best urban ethnographies that I have read in a long time, it is essential reading not just for specialists in immigration but for anyone interested in how ethnicity is constructed in urban settings, in the formation of transnational communities, and in the study of the family as both resource and constraint among the urban poor."
Bryan R. Roberts, Population Research Center, University of Texas at Austin

"Hagan's study is a welcome addition to the small but growing literature on the contemporary Maya diaspora."
Geographical Review



Table of Contents
Tables Preface and Acknowledgments Part I: Building a Community Structure in Houston 1. Introduction 2. Community of Origin and the Transfer of Cultural Resources 3. The Settlement Process Part II: The Journey through Legalization 4. The Social Process of Becoming Legal 5. Life after Legalization 6. Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index

Deciding To Be Legal: A Maya Community in Houston

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    A Paperback / softback by Jacqueline Hagan

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      View other formats and editions of Deciding To Be Legal: A Maya Community in Houston by Jacqueline Hagan

      Publisher: Temple University Press,U.S.
      Publication Date: 30/12/1994
      ISBN13: 9781566392570, 978-1566392570
      ISBN10: 1566392578
      Also in:
      Sociology

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Understanding the process of becoming legal from the perspective of an immigrant community

      Trade Review
      "This book makes an important contribution to the debate over immigration. It is theoretically sophisticated, particularly in its analysis of immigration and legalization as processes rather than definitive decisions, in its recognition that immigrants vary in the cultural and social capital that they bring, and in making clear that immigration means different things for men and for women. The empirical research is unusually rich since it is based on three years of intensive field work in which Hagan followed closely the decisions that her informants made with respect to staying or returning and taking advantage of the legalization provisions of the Immigration Reform and Control Act. The result is a fascinating account of how Maya Indians from Guatemala have adjusted to life in the post-industrial world of Houston. As one of the best urban ethnographies that I have read in a long time, it is essential reading not just for specialists in immigration but for anyone interested in how ethnicity is constructed in urban settings, in the formation of transnational communities, and in the study of the family as both resource and constraint among the urban poor."
      Bryan R. Roberts, Population Research Center, University of Texas at Austin

      "Hagan's study is a welcome addition to the small but growing literature on the contemporary Maya diaspora."
      Geographical Review



      Table of Contents
      Tables Preface and Acknowledgments Part I: Building a Community Structure in Houston 1. Introduction 2. Community of Origin and the Transfer of Cultural Resources 3. The Settlement Process Part II: The Journey through Legalization 4. The Social Process of Becoming Legal 5. Life after Legalization 6. Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index

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