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Mexican Americans are citizens of the United States of Mexican descent. Mexican Americans account for 64% of the Hispanic or Latino population of the United States. About 26.8 million Americans listed their ancestry as "Mexican".[1] Settlement concentrations are found in metropolitan and rural areas across the United States, with the highest concentrations in the Southwest and the Midwest. Chicago and Los Angeles are particular areas for large Mexican American communities. Other cities in the Upper Midwest with thriving Mexican American communities are Detroit, Kansas City, Missouri, St. Louis, Milwaukee and Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota. There are also isolated concentrations of Mexican Americans in mostly rural areas in Florida and North Carolina. Growing populations are also present in other parts of the rural Southeastern United States, in states such as Georgia, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Alabama and Arkansas. A growing population is also present in urban areas such as Washington, DC, New York City, Miami and Philadelphia.
History of Mexican Americans
Racial and ethnic classification of Mexican AmericansBefore the United States' borders expanded westward, New World regions dominated by the Spanish Empire in the 16th century held to a complex caste system that classified persons by their fractional racial makeup and geographic origin.[2][3] See Casta. As the United States' border expanded, the Census Bureau changed the traditional racial classification methods for Mexican Americans under United States jurisdiction. The Bureau's classification system has evolved significantly from its inception:
Politics of racial classificationThroughout U.S. history, many Mexican Americans have been socially classified as 'non-white' by the American people, despite Census criteria and legal constructions classifying them as white.[6] However, in times when Mexicans were uniformly allotted white status, they were permitted to intermarry with what today are termed non-Hispanic whites (unlike blacks and Asians). They were allowed to acquire U.S. citizenship upon arrival; served in all-white units during the World War II; could vote and hold elected office in places such as Texas, especially San Antonio; ran the state politics and constituted most of the elite of New Mexico since colonial times; and went to integrated schools in Central Texas and Los Angeles. Additionally, Asians were barred from marrying Mexican Americans because of their legal white status. All Mexicans were legally considered 'white' because of early treaty obligations to Spaniards and Mexicans for citizenship status at a time when white-ness was considered a prerequisite for U.S. citizenship.[7][8] Economic and social issuesImage:Cesar-chavez-USPS.jpg César E. Chávez-founder of the United Farm Workers, a labor union of migrant farm laborers, and civil rights activist in the 1960's and 1970's called for organization of employees' rights groups and expanded political representation of Mexican Americans. The economy has long needed service workers, manufacturing workers, farm laborers, and skilled artisans. Mexican workers have usually met those demands for cheap labor. However, fear of detection and deportation keeps many [Illegal Aliens] workers from taking advantage of social welfare programs as well as interaction with public authorities and makes them highly vulnerable to exploitation by employers. Some employers, however, over the last decade, have developed a "don't ask, don't tell" attitude, indicating a greater comfort with or casual approach toward hiring Mexican nationals who are in the country illegally. This is a major political controversy in the US in the late 20th century and in May 2006, millions of illegal immigrants, Mexicans and other nationalities, walked out of their jobs across the country to demonstrate for changes in immigration status laws, in hopes for amnesty to become naturalized citizens like similar acts in 1986 granted citizenship to Mexican nationals living and working illegally in the US. In the United States, where Mexican Americans make up a significant percentage of the population, such as California and Texas, illegal aliens and Mexican Americans almost exclusively occupy blue-collar occupations: they are restaurant workers, janitors, truck drivers, gardeners, construction laborers, material moving workers, or perform other types of manual labor. In many of these places with large Latino populations, blue-collar workers are often considered Mexican Americans because of their dominance in those occupations. Occasionally, tensions have risen between Mexican immigrants and other ethnic groups because of increasing concerns over the availability of working-class jobs to non-Hispanic ethnic groups. However, tensions have also risen among American Hispanic laborers who have been displaced because of both cheap Mexican labor and ethnic profiling, and African-American workers claimed the Mexican laborers are advancing further than native-born blacks, this caused some racial tensions between black and Mexicans in the Southwest US. It was recently noticed that the Mexican immigrants are slowly climbing the socioeconomic ladder, but this was the case in the past by previous Mexican immigrants who came (legally or not) and worked hard their way in the ladder for the "American dream". Discrimination and StereotypesThroughout U.S. history, Mexican Americans have endured negative stereotypes among the American people.[9] Such stereotypes have long circulated in the media. For example, Mexican Americans are called street criminals, field workers and illegal immigrants. These stereotypes appear in movies, television, music and news reports. Most Mexican Americans are portrayed in films as second class citizens and backward people. Racial stereotypes have amounted to discrimination against Mexican Americans through much of the 20th century. Mexican Americans in the past had difficulties in obtaining employment, education and loans. Private clubs excluded Mexican Americans along with blacks and Jews. Across the Southwest states, Mexican Americans lived in separate residential areas, due to laws and real estate company policies. This group of laws and policies, known as redlining, lasted until the 1950s, and fall under the concept of official segregation.[citation needed] However, famous Mexican Americans like Chicano folk musician Lalo Guerrero spoofed these stereotypes in musical comedy, in songs titled, "Yes, There are No Tortillas" , "No Chicanos on TV" and "Pancho Sánchez" sang in the tune of Disney's 1950s song "Davy Crockett, Man of the Wild Frontier". Mexican Americans also found themselves targeted by hate groups, such as the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s, which had a major influence in Texas[citation needed]. In the 1940s, viciously racist imagery in newspapers and crime novels portrayed Mexican zoot suiters as disloyal "foreigners" or murderers attacking White-Anglo police officers. Neo-Nazis in the 1990s attacked several Latino individuals for looking "Mexican" or "illegal alien". Social status and assimilatiionBarrow (2005) finds increases in average personal and household incomes for Mexican Americans in the 21st century. U.S. born Mexican Americans earn more and are represented more in the middle- and upper-class segments more than recently arriving Mexican immigrants. It should be noted, however, that Mexican Americans are not well represented in the professions. Huntington (2005) argues that the sheer number, concentration, linguistic homogeneity, and other characteristic of Hispanic immigrants will erode the dominance of English as a nationally unifying language, weaken the country's dominant cultural values, and promote ethnic allegiances over a primary identification as an American. Testing these hypotheses with data from the U.S. Census and national and Los Angeles opinion surveys, Citrin et al. (2007) show that Hispanics acquire English and lose Spanish rapidly beginning with the second generation, and appear to be no more or less religious or committed to the work ethic than native-born whites. Moreover, a clear majority of Hispanics reject a purely ethnic identification and patriotism grows from one generation to the next. At present, a traditional pattern of political assimilation appears to prevail. [10] South et al (2005) examines Hispanic spatial assimilation and inter-neighborhood geographic mobility. Their longitudinal analysis of seven hundred Mexican, Puerto Rican, and Cuban immigrants followed from 1990 to 1995 finds broad support for hypotheses derived from the classical account of minority assimilation. High income, English-language use, and embeddedness in Anglo social contexts increased Latino immigrants' geographic mobility into Anglo neighborhoods. US citizenship and years spent in the United States were positively associated with geographic mobility into more Anglo neighborhoods, and coethnic contact was inversely associated with this form of mobility, but these associations operated largely through other predictors. Prior experiences of ethnic discrimination increased and residence in public housing decreased the likelihood that Latino immigrants would move from their origin neighborhoods, while residing in metropolitan areas with large Latino populations led to geographic moves into "less Anglo" census tracts.[11] See also List of Mexican American communities References
Further readingMartha Menchaca (2002). Recovering History, Constructing Race: The Indian, Black, and White Roots of Mexican Americans. University of Texas Press, 19–21. ISBN 0292752547. William A. Nericcio (2007). "Tex(t)-Mex: Seductive Hallucination of the 'Mexican' in America"; utpress book; book galleryblog Notes
See also
Chicano and Mexican-American topics
Terms Pre-Chicano Movement Chicano Movement Supreme Court cases Culture Lists and categories
ko:멕시칸-아메리칸 nl:Mexicaans-Amerikanen
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