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No Man's Land

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From South Africa in the nineteenth century to Hong Kong today, nations around the world, including the United States, have turned to guestworker programs to manage migration. These temporary labor...
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  • 17 November 2013
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From South Africa in the nineteenth century to Hong Kong today, nations around the world, including the United States, have turned to guestworker programs to manage migration. These temporary labor recruitment systems represented a state-brokered compromise between employers who wanted foreign workers and those who feared rising numbers of immigrants. Unlike immigrants, guestworkers couldn't settle, bring their families, or become citizens, and they had few rights. Indeed, instead of creating a manageable form of migration, guestworker programs created an especially vulnerable class of labor.

Based on a vast array of sources from U.S., Jamaican, and English archives, as well as interviews, No Man's Land tells the history of the American "H2" program, the world's second oldest guestworker program. Since World War II, the H2 program has brought hundreds of thousands of mostly Jamaican men to the United States to do some of the nation's dirtiest and most dangerous farmwork for some of its biggest and most powerful agricultural corporations, companies that had the power to import and deport workers from abroad. Jamaican guestworkers occupied a no man's land between nations, protected neither by their home government nor by the United States. The workers complained, went on strike, and sued their employers in class action lawsuits, but their protests had little impact because they could be repatriated and replaced in a matter of hours.

No Man's Land puts Jamaican guestworkers' experiences in the context of the global history of this fast-growing and perilous form of labor migration.

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Price: $34.00
Pages: 352
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Imprint: Princeton University Press
Series: Politics and Society in Modern America
Publication Date: 17 November 2013
ISBN: 9780691160153
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

HISTORY / United States / 20th Century, History of the Americas, HISTORY / Caribbean & West Indies / General, LAW / Labor & Employment, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Human Rights, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Labor & Industrial Relations, Employment and labour law: general, Human rights, civil rights, Industrial arbitration and negotiation, Trade unions

"Winner of the 2012 Merle Curti Award, Organization of American Historians"
Cindy Hahamovitch is the B. Phinizy Spalding Distinguished Professor of History at the University of Georgia and a Distinguished Lecturer for the Organization of American Historians. She is the author of The Fruits of Their Labor: Atlantic Coast Farmworkers and the Making of Migrant Poverty, 18701945.