Sponsored Migration Chapter Summary

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The book Sponsored Migration: The State and Puerto Rican Postwar Migration to the United States by Edgardo Meléndez tells of the various factors that intertwine with the politics of the United States. He lays the foundation that while migration is a grand cultural expedition as portrayed in mainstream, it is almost never simply due to one thing. The government and economy are constants in the deciding factor for many migrants without them really knowing it. Migration is laced with politics and money, and Meléndez discloses the various historical accounts attesting to this.
Puerto Rican migration was greatly influenced by both the United States and its own government. Even though Puerto Rico’s government made and executed its own migration …show more content…

Part of these policies granted the Puerto Rican government engagement in the authorizing worker recruitment in Puerto Rico. Migration offices would establish English-speaking classes, wellness programs, and the government would establish the FPP to help laborers be more prepared to handle and succeed in the American society. No U.S. employer could hire a Puerto Rican worker without a contract approved by the Puerto Rican government. These policies helped American industry keep in contact with outside sources that were cheaper and simultaneously gave the Puerto Rican community the ability to find better work and bring home larger …show more content…

Government funding on various means of transportation, various agencies to assist in laborer’s successes in the United States, and other social programs was conducive to the migrants’ ease of transition between the two lands. The United States, although not being entirely socially welcoming (as portrayed in the Michigan incident), many businesses had open doors to Puerto Rican workers, who were inexpensive, hard-working, and single, as opposed to the Mexican workers fighting for better pay and working conditions at the time. Puerto Rican migration therefore was not just about moving to another place to find work. It was also about an island’s government that wanted its people to do the best they could to better maintain the home in which they

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