Neighborhood poverty and segregation in the (re-)production of disadvantage : Mexican immigrant entrepreneurs in Los Angeles / Dolores Trevizo, Mary Lopez
- Author:
- Trevizo, Dolores
- Published:
- Cham, Switzerland : Palgrave Macmillan, [2018]
- Copyright Date:
- ©2018
- Physical Description:
- xvi, 211 pages : illustrations (some color), 1 map ; 22 cm
- Additional Creators:
- Lopez, Mary Jane
- Contents:
- 1. Introduction: The Social Ecology of Disadvantage for Mexican Immigrant Entrepreneurs -- 2. Hardline Policies, Blocked Mobility, and Immigrant Entrepreneurs -- 3. Re-producing Economic Inequality Across the US-Mexican Border -- 4. Mexican Segregation: Good or Bad for Business? -- 5. Gendered Differences Among Mexican Immigrant Shopkeepers -- 6. From "Illegal" to Neighborhood Shopkeeper: How Legal Capital Affects Business Performance -- 7. Conclusion: Making It in Business from the Outside-In -- Appendix A: Characteristics of Entrepreneurs, A Comparison -- Appendix B: State of Origin of LA Entrepreneurs -- Appendix C: Historical Highlights of the Economic and Ethnic Landscape of Los Angeles' Latino Concentrated Areas -- Appendix D: Mexican Sending States and Los Angeles Neighborhoods, Regions, and Select Variables -- References -- Index.
- Summary:
- Focusing on shopkeepers in Latino/a neighborhoods in Los Angeles, Dolores Trevizo and Mary Lopez reveal how neighborhood poverty affects th business performance of Mexican immigrant entrepreneurs. Their survey of shopkeepers in twenty immigrant neighborhoods demonstrates that even slightly less impoverished, multiethnic communities offer better business opportunities than do the highly impoverished, racially segregated Mexican neighborhoods of Los Angeles. Their findings reveal previously overlooked aspects of microclass, as well as "legal capital" advantages. The authors argue that even poor Mexican immigrants whose class backgrounds in Mexico imparted an entrepreneurial disposition can achieve a modicum of business success in the right (U.S.) neighborhood context, and the more quickly they build legal capital, the better their outcomes. While the authors show that the local place characteristics of neighborhoods both reflect and reproduce class and racial inequalities, they also demonstrate that the diversity of experience among Mexican immigrants living within the spatial boundaries of these communities can contribute to economic mobility--back cover.
- Subject(s):
- Neighborhoods—Economic aspects—United States
- Hispanic American neighborhoods—California—Los Angeles
- Neighborhoods—Social aspects—California—Los Angeles
- Mexicans—United States—Economic conditions
- Mexicans—United States—Social conditions
- Immigrant business enterprises—California—Los Angeles
- Entrepreneurship—California—Los Angeles
- Immigrants—United States—Economic conditions
- Minority business enterprises—California—Los Angeles
- Foreign workers—California—Los Angeles
- Entrepreneurship
- Foreign workers
- Hispanic American neighborhoods
- Immigrant business enterprises
- Immigrants—Economic conditions
- Mexicans—Economic conditions
- Mexicans—Social conditions
- Minority business enterprises
- Neighborhoods—Economic aspects
- Neighborhoods—Social aspects
- California—Los Angeles
- United States
- ISBN:
- 3319737147 (hardcover)
9783319737140 (hardcover) - Bibliography Note:
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 187-207) and index.
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