Which had allowed approximately 4.8 million Mexican contracts towards the end Where the migrants were …show more content…
There was some strike that follow where about hundreds of workers were leaving due to low wages for those working in a company. On June 17,1946, 400 strikers at the three Nampa-area labor camps in Idaho were joined by over 600 workers at Marsing, Franklin, Upper Deer Flat, and Amalgamated Sugar Company camps. Numerous strikes and work stoppages were called to protest the extreme low wages maintained through dual-wage systems. Strikers were confronted by antialien, antiunion farmers determined not to compromise The Mexican economy depended on migrant remittances, the actual Bracero Program gave the Mexican government few controls on emigrants’ movements. Did gave them a few controls but one cannot see what every farmer is doing and how it …show more content…
The program was rising then falling right back down in a pattern, which fail to be renew then the program ended. Half a century later, “Mexico Now” illustrates a new vision of a cooperative partnership between domestic and foreign capital. Men no longer occupy the center of the frame, having been replaced by women as the primary workers in export processing.
Two years after it had finish when it ended stories started to come up when one was a bracero. The way they describe it was for them to break the silence about how it was for them. The program was developing to help the social, political and economic cost from the war to be able to improve. In the end, The Bracero Program had allow them to work in other states it started to grow but when it had its down where they were giving up due to the abusing of the farmers and the