The Latino Journey in the United States: Immigrants

1699 Words4 Pages

A diverse minority group of Latino and Spanish-speaking peoples has played an important part of what it means to be American and what it means to be a citizen in the United States today. Moving into the future, in order to analyze the trajectory that this group is in, we must first understand the group’s history in the United States and in territories that would become the United States. In addition, we must look at the origins of the most recent wave of Latino immigration in order to understand their current effect on American society and the intersection between both minority and majority groups. Finally, we get to the apex of this investigation: what lies in the future for Latino Americans in the United States? Although Latino Americans have been portrayed by the majority American culture as a lazy, thieving, and dirty people, their presence in the United States has immensely contributed to it’s development socially, economically, and politically, and their continued presence seems integral to the future of an America that is fast arriving at an age-related demographics problem that threatens our continued prosperity and the solvency of the Social Security system. These new immigrants brought new traditions, a foreign language to the United States, but also ideological diversity. People like Jose Marti fought for Cuban independence from U.S. shores, Luisa Capetillo and later Luisa Moreno fought for labor and women’s rights, and organizations like the League of United States Latin American Citizens (LULAC) and El Congreso de Pueblos de Habla Española (the Spanish-Speaking People’s Congress) organized Spanish-speaking people to try to harness their political power more effectively, giving Spanish speaking communities a vo... ... middle of paper ... ...iated with the retirement of the Baby Boom generation. Works Cited Diana Evans, Ana Franco, J.L. Polinard, James P. Wenzel, Robert D. Wrinkle. “Ethnic concerns and Latino party affiliation.” The Social Science Journal 49.2 (2012) 150–154 “Immigration: Long Term Trends and America's Future Arrival Rates, Integration Patterns, and Impact on an Aging Society.” Immigration Policy Center (2008): 1-4 Ruiz, Vicki L. "Nuestra américa: Latino history as United States history." The Journal of American History 93.3 (2006): 655-672. Song, Sarah. "Majority norms, multiculturalism, and gender equality." American Political Science Review 99.04 (2005): 473-489. "The Hispanic Population: 2010." . U.S. Census, 1 May 2011. Web. 29 Apr. 2014. . Torres, Lourdes. "A new day for Latinos." Latino Studies 11.1 (2013): 1-3.

Open Document