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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(113,730 posts)
Thu Sep 5, 2024, 02:18 PM Sep 5

Chinese migrants flock to Mexico in search of jobs, a future and, for some, a taste of freedom

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Despite her well-paying tech job, Li Daijing didn’t hesitate when her cousin asked for help running a restaurant in Mexico City. She packed up and left China for the Mexican capital last year, with dreams of a new adventure.

The 30-year-old woman from Chengdu, the Sichuan provincial capital, hopes one day to start an online business importing furniture from her home country.

“I want more,” Li said. “I want to be a strong woman. I want independence.”

Li is among a new wave of Chinese migrants who are leaving their country in search of opportunities, more freedom or better financial prospects at a time when China’s economy has slowed, youth unemployment rates remain high and its relations with the U.S. and its allies have soured.

https://apnews.com/article/chinese-immigration-mexico-jobs-freedom-a69db5fc43fb380a4472b03b469fdcea

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Chinese migrants flock to Mexico in search of jobs, a future and, for some, a taste of freedom (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Sep 5 OP
They may be disappointed. Jim__ Sep 5 #1

Jim__

(14,391 posts)
1. They may be disappointed.
Thu Sep 5, 2024, 02:58 PM
Sep 5

A book by Claudio Lomnitz:

Claudio Lomnitz is the Campbell Family Professor of Anthropology at Columbia. His most recent book is Sovereignty and Extortion: A New State Form in Mexico. (September 2024)



From the review at Amazon:




Over the past fifteen years in Mexico, more than 450,000 people have been murdered and 110,000 more have been disappeared. In Sovereignty and Extortion, Claudio Lomnitz examines the Mexican state in relation to this extreme violence, uncovering a reality that challenges the familiar narratives of “a war on drugs” or a “failed state.” Tracing how neoliberal reforms, free trade agreements, and a burgeoning drug economy have shaped Mexico’s sociopolitical landscape, Lomnitz shows that the current crisis does not represent a tear in the social fabric. Rather, it reveals a fundamental shift in the relationship between the state and the economy in which traditional systems of policing, governance, and the rule of law have eroded. Lomnitz finds that power is now concentrated in the presidency and enforced through militarization, which has left the state estranged from itself and incapable of administering justice or regaining control over violence. Through this critical examination, Lomnitz offers a new theory of the state, its forms of sovereignty, and its shifting relation to capital and militarization.
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