Latino Social Movements
Historical and Theoretical Perspectives
Series: New Political Science Reader S.;
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Product details:
- Edition number 1
- Publisher Routledge
- Date of Publication 21 April 1999
- ISBN 9780415922999
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages216 pages
- Size 229x152 mm
- Weight 317 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Long description:
Latinos make up the fastest growing population segment in the US, and by the middle of the next century, they will outnumber all other minority groups combined. Even more significant is the fact that within a few years, Latinos will number more than a quarter of the nation's work force; this is more than three times their proportion in the general population.
Latino Social Movements discusses the socioeconomic and cultural consequences of the changing US population in the light of globalization. It calls attention to the increasing significance of class and the system of global capitalism that underlies political relations of power. Focusing on the place of labor, class, patriarchy and capital, this collection relates these objective realities with the subjective context of popular attempts to transform the existing socio-economic conditions of Latino life.
Table of Contents:
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION, Rodolfo D. Torres, George Katsiaficas; Chapter 2 Anti-Colonial Chicana Feminism, Teresa Córdova; Chapter 3 Lessons from el Barrio—The East Harlem Real Great Society/Urban Planning Studio: A Puerto Rican Chapter in the Fight for Urban Self-Determination, Luis Aponte-Parés; Chapter 4 Boricuas, African Americans, and Chicanos in the Far West: Notes on the Puerto Rican Pro-Independence Movement in California, 1960s–1980s1, Victor M. Rodriguez; Chapter 5 The 1933 Los Angeles County Farm Workers Strike, Gilbert G. González; Chapter 6 Latino Immigrant Workers in the Los Angeles Apparel Industry, Edna Bonacich; Chapter 7 Latino Politics—Class Struggles: Reflections on the Future of Latino Politics, Martha E. Gimenez; Chapter 8 The Cloning of La Raza Unida Part y for the Twenty-first Century: Electoral Pragmatism or Misguided Nostalgia?, Richard Santillan;
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