essay

Manos que sobran: work, migration and the Puerto Rican in the 1990's

commuter nation : perspectives on puerto rican migrationRío Piedras, P. R. • Published In 1994 • Pages: 115-149

By: Bonilla, Frank.

Abstract
In this document Bonilla sketches the main parameters of an ongoing transition to a service based economy both in Puerto Rico and New York City with a particular focus on its impact on employment and unemployment as it bears on Puerto Ricans along with the implications of this process for migration trends. In addition the author presents a summary critique of employment generating strategies being endorsed from various quarters in the United States and Puerto Rico as part of programs of 'reindustrialization' or 'recomposition' of capital accumulation in the wake of sharp declines in industrial production. He then attempts to tie the above together by presenting a research agenda so that actions intended to break the long standing cycle of repeated uprooting, joblessness, and poverty may find more realistic grounding (p. 117). Although much of this study deals with theoretical constructs, and with the island rather than the mainland Puerto Ricans, there is some information on demography and employment in New York City and the United States for the period of the 1960s-1980s which makes this a useful source of information for the researcher.
Subjects
Theoretical orientation in research and its results
Population
Composition of population
History and culture change
Labor supply and employment
culture
Puerto Ricans (Mainland)
HRAF PubDate
2002
Region
North America
Sub Region
Regional, Ethnic and Diaspora Cultures
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Type
Sociologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
Analyst
John Beierle ; 2000
Field Date
no date
Coverage Date
1970s-1980s
Coverage Place
New York, N.Y., United States
Notes
Frank Bonilla
Includes bibliographical references (p. 148-149)
LCCN
91027083
LCSH
Puerto Ricans--United States