Hispanic and Latino Communities in Atlanta
978-613-3-81599-5
613381599X
128
2010-11-03
45.00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Atlanta, Georgia is the largest urban center in the southeastern US. Since the 1980s, the region has undergone profound social, cultural and demographic change. Before the region had two main ethnic groups: African American and European American (Dameron and Murphy 1997). In the 1970s and 1980s, over 10,000 migrants and refugees from Vietnam arrived in Atlanta, changing the ethnic make-up of the region, as well as political, economic and social relations (CARA 1996; Dameron and Murphy 1997). From 1980 to 1995, the Hispanic population of Georgia grew 130%. By 1996 there were 462,973 Hispanics in Georgia (Dameron and Murphy 1997). There are no figures on the number of Hispanics who are Mexican; estimates from centers that deal with Hispanics are that about 90% of Hispanics are Mexican. The numbers of Hispanics who are women is even more difficult to ascertain. Many Mexicans are undocumented, and women, even more so, which makes them even more difficult to count.
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Социология
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