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Maquiladora

A maquiladora (Spanish: [makilaˈðoɾa]), or maquila (IPA: [maˈkila]), is a word that refers to factories that are largely duty free and tariff-free. These factories take raw materials and assemble, manufacture, or process them and export the finished product. These factories and systems are present throughout Latin America, including Mexico, Paraguay, Nicaragua, and El Salvador. Maquiladoras date back to 1964, when the Mexican government introduced the Programa de Industrialización Fronteriza ('Border Industrialization Program').[1] Specific programs and laws have made Mexico's maquila industry grow rapidly.[2]

A maquila in Mexico

History Edit

From 1942 to 1964, the Bracero program allowed men with farming experience to work on US farms on a seasonal basis, and its end ushered in a new era for the development of Mexico.[3][4] The Border Industrialization Program (BIP) began in 1965 and allowed for a lowering in restrictions and duties on machinery, equipment and raw materials. Before this program, PRONAF, a national border program for infrastructure developments like building roads, parks, electricity, water, building factories, and cleaning up border cities, helped to improve situations along the US-Mexico Border. With BIP, foreign firms were able to use factories built under PRONAF to import raw materials and export goods for a cheaper cost than in other countries.[5][6] One of the main goals of the Border Industrialization Program was to attract foreign investment.[7]

In 1989, the federal government put in place specific procedures and requirements for maquilas under the “Decree for Development and Operation of the Maquiladora Industry”.[8] After the Mexican debt crisis of 1980, the economy liberalized and foreign investment increased. Factory jobs began to leave central Mexico, and workers followed the jobs from central Mexico to the maquilas in the north and on the border.[9] In 1985, maquiladoras overtook tourism as the largest source of foreign exchange, and since 1996 they have been the second largest industry in Mexico behind the petroleum industry.[10]

NAFTA Edit

With the introduction of NAFTA in 1994, Northern Mexico became an export processing zone. This allowed multinational corporations from the US to produce products cheaply. Corporations could use a maquila to import materials and produce a good more cheaply than in the US by paying Mexican laborers lower wages and paying less in duties. Mexicans work for approximately one-sixth of the U.S. hourly rate.[9] During the five years before NAFTA, maquila employment had grown at a rate of 47%; this figure increased to 86% in the next five years. The number of factories also increased dramatically. Between 1989 and 1994, 564 new plants opened; in the five years following, 1460 plants opened. However, the maquiladora growth is largely attributable to growth in US demand and devaluation of the peso, not NAFTA itself.[11][12][13] In the 1970s, most maquiladoras were located around the Mexico–United States border. By 1994, these were spread in the interior parts of the country, although the majority of the plants were still near the border.[citation needed]

The 2000s Edit

A 2011 Federal Reserve report indicated that the maquiladora industry affects U.S. border city employment in service sectors.[14] Although the maquiladora industry suffered due to the early 2000s recession, maquiladoras constituted 54% of the US-Mexico trade in 2004, and by 2005, the maquiladora exports accounted for half of Mexico's exports.[13] In the 2000s, the maquila industry faced competition due to rise of other countries with availability of cheap labor, including Malaysia, India, and Pakistan. The biggest threat came from China's Special Economic Areas.[13]

Growth and Development Edit

During the later half of the 1960s, maquiladora industries rapidly expanded geographically and economically and by 1985, had become Mexico's second largest source of income from exports, behind oil.[15] Since 1973, maquiladoras have also accounted for nearly half of Mexico's export assembly.[15] Between 1995 and 2000, exports of assembled products in Mexico tripled, and the rate of the industry's growth amounted to about one new factory per day.[16] By the late twentieth century, the industry accounted for 25 percent of Mexico's gross domestic product, and 17 percent of total Mexican employment.[17]

Globalization Edit

Since globalization and physical restructuring[citation needed] have contributed to the competition and advent of low-cost offshore assembly in places such as China, and countries in Central America, maquiladoras in Mexico have been on the decline since 2000. According to federal sources, approximately 529 maquiladoras shut down and investment in assembly plants decreased by 8.2 percent in 2002 after the imposition of countervailing duties on Chinese products, not available in North America, that were part of the electronics supply chain.[16] Despite the decline, over 3,000 maquiladoras still exist along the 2,000 mile-long United States–Mexico border, providing employment for approximately one million workers, and importing more than $51 billion in supplies into Mexico.[18] Research indicates that maquiladoras' post-NAFTA growth is connected to changes in Mexican wages relative to those in Asia and in the United States, and to fluctuations in U.S. industrial production.[19] As of 2006, maquiladoras still accounted for 45 percent of Mexico's exports.[20] Maquiladoras, in general, are best represented among operations that are particularly assembly intensive.[citation needed]

The benefits and drawbacks of export-oriented industrial vocations for women as well as how international labor standards, affect these occupations. The goal of this piece is to challenge ideas that portray export-based, industrial occupations as respectable choices for women in Mexico and Central America, as well as to cast doubt on the idea that global labor standards may serve as a substitute for bettering working conditions. This article is based on extensive research on women in Mexico's and Central America's maquiladoras and emphasizes three interconnected issues: the importance of local and regional settings that shape various industrialization trajectories across time, the agency represented by women workers, and the legal tools already set in place in efforts to improve working conditions.[21]

Women Edit

Women enter the Labor Force and Face Inequality through Different Means Edit

Women entered the labor force in Mexico in large numbers in the latter half of the 20th century. Devaluations of the peso in 1982 and 1994 pushed many Mexican women into the labor force. Between 1970 and 1995, 18% more women were part of the working force,[22] and many of these women were working in maquila factories. Women looked for work in factories because they could get jobs with few credentials and receive on the job training.[22] Men working in maquilas were given positions of supervision, management, engineers, and technical jobs, while women were relegated to low-skill jobs.[22][6] Young women tended to be hired more often than older women, but it depended on the circumstances of the job and type of factory. However, young single women often ended up in factories with better working conditions, like the electronics plants, while older women and mothers worked in more dangerous apparel factories.[22]

Gender plays a key role in both disguising and preserving economic frustration in the city of Juárez, Mexico. Given that several women are brutally murdered in Mexico, with Juárez as one of the main city targets, it is essential to look into the orientations of male authority, cheap labor exploitation, and the maquiladoras export processing zone. Oftentimes, young women are murdered as a result of economic frustration, being directed at the maquiladora workers. Working women are viewed by the maquiladora system as "cheap labor" and easily replaceable, which makes it easy and acceptable to kill these women without consequences. In order to examine the relationship between gender and production, gender and violence, this article focuses on situating the killings of these women within their social and ideological contexts. In this piece, the reasons for these women's treatment and the social justifications for it are examined.[23]

Poverty is a key factor that motivates women to work in maquiladoras. The minimum wage set by the Mexican government is barely enough to help sustain a family even with both parents working. The minimum wage "buys only about a quarter of the basic necessities that are essential for a typical worker’s family".[24] Maquilas pay at much higher rate than the minimum wage in most markets since there is a lot of competition for the best workers, and workers will not work without transportation and other bonuses. The 2015 minimum wage was 70.1 pesos per day in Tijuana (minimum wages vary by zone and worker classification) or about $0.55 per hour at the 2016 exchange rate of 16 pesos per dollar,[25] while most entry-level positions in maquilas paid closer to $2 per hour including bonuses and 25% being paid to Social Security, housing, and retirement. Even in maquila factories, wages are still very low and in many families the children are encouraged to start working at an early age to support the family.[22] In some maquiladoras, workers are cut and their responsibilities are given to a single worker. These workers are not given a higher pay, and are expected to maintain their output without a decrease in quality. They often work involuntary overtimes and are often not paid for their extra labor.[22]

Gendered Violence in the Maquiladora Labor Force Edit

Allegedly, women are not allowed to be pregnant while working. Some maquilas require female workers to take pregnancy tests. Some require that workers resign if they are pregnant.[9][26] Female applicants are made to take pregnancy tests and are only hired if not pregnant, and women that become pregnant while working at maquila factories are given more strenuous tasks and forced to work unpaid overtime to influence them to resign.[22][27] The Humans Rights Watch wrote a report in 1996 about the failures of the government to address this issue despite the fact that pregnancy testing violates Mexican federal labor law.[27] These practices have continued into the 21st century.[28] Once on the job, many women face sexual harassment by supervisors and find no help from human resources.[26]

Due to the cruel and horrific appearances of violence against women in Mexican society, feminists have been working at the community level to end sexual violence against women in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, many years before the #MeToo movement was even conceived. Sociologists and feminists wonder whether the #MeToo movement has already taken root in Mexico and if so, how? Sociologists and feminists ask themselves questions such as: Has Ciudad Juárez's #MeToo movement made an influence on women's lives there? If so, by how much and why? This article explores the significance of maquiladoras and how the working conditions there have impacted women as well, by allowing the exploitation of women. Finally, the article successfully communicates all of its ideas through a thorough discussion between its authors.[29]

Rita Segato, is an Argentine-Brazilian scholar who also identifies as a feminist and has a sociological point of view, makes an effort to make sense of the femicides that occur in Ciudad Juárez. Segato examines the violence, bigotry, and ego with which Mexican men treat their women. These women are typically young ladies who are small, dark skinned, with long hair and work largely in the maquiladora labor force... In comparison to other parts of Mexico, Ciudad Juárez is a risky place for women to live. These Mexican men view these women's bodies as throwaway and erasable objects that they can use anyway they choose. As if that weren't clear, the bodies of women from the Mexican border continue to be consumed by misogyny that has reached the most dreadful level of brutality.[30] Many women are injured in maquilas. Intense work pace and pressure on high production leads to injuries including upper back, neck, and shoulder pain. Many maquilas do not report accidents and workers are not compensated for injuries received on the job.[22] Workplace hazards include toxic chemicals, and workplaces lack health and safety practices like ventilation and face masks.[22] The men in authority severely exploit these women, which makes matters worse.

"Drawbacks" associated with Unionization Edit

Labor unions exist in maquiladoras, but many are charro unions, which are government supported and not in the interest of the worker. Official unions discredit maquiladora workers by calling them "agitators".[22] Workers who complain can be fired and blacklisted from other jobs. Many contracts are only for a few months, allowing companies to have a high turn-over rate in which workers never have the chance to organize for their rights.[22] Many tried to organize independent unions, but often failed. Rita Segato investigates the historical changes associated with war and the essential role that inhumanity obtains in it toward people who do not participate in the conflict, such as women and children. According to Segato, violence against women has stopped being an outcome of war but instead has turned into a strategic goal. Governed by armed corporations with the participation of state and para-state forces, this is where the new forms of conflict take place. Tragically, women and children have become victims of both physical abuse, bodily mutilation, body trafficking and commercialization.[31]

In 1993, the Mexican labor federation, the Authentic Labor Front, and the United Electrical Workers worked together to improve conditions at the General Electric factory, but failed in the loss of an election. The Center for Labor Studies (CETLAC) was opened in the mid 1990s and worked to educate workers about their rights and activism decreased in light of violence against women. In Juarez, between 1993 and 2005, more than 370 women were murdered. In 2010, more than 370 women were murdered. A new wave of worker protests has emerged in the 21st Century as workers decide that enough is enough. In 2015 in Juarez, maquiladora workers set up encampments, plantons, to protest and demand independent unions.[26] Rita Segato argues using a de-colonial feminist viewpoint that contends that patriarchal political structures existed in communal societies prior to colonialism. According to Segato, the modern gender system's capture the changes of pre colonial dual gender structures which worsen inequality, boosts violence against women, and depoliticizes them. To Segato, pre colonial gender differs significantly from colonial-modern societies gender structures, which operate in terms of a beneficiary and its subordinated others. In this article, Segato focuses on the patriarchal institutions of Ciudad Juárez, Mexico and Brazil's National Indian Foundation (FUNAI) to extensively analyze and characterize these preexisting structures.[32]

Effects on the Mexican-American Border Edit

Neoliberalism has been placed in the framework of the U.S.-Mexico border region, and it is highly stratified by race, class, and gender. This article explores the categories of race, class, gender, and capitalism and how they exist in the neoliberal maquiladoras of Mexico. The article also discusses how the racialization of individuals living south of the border underlies and reinforces the prosecution of "illegal aliens'' and how it puts Mexican women and children in danger. The racialization and gendering of the maquiladora workplace is also explored alongside the work process of U.S. distribution centers and the supply chain of commodities. In the city of Juarez, where women have been brutally murdered as a result of the maquiladora killings, the heartless mindset of regarding Mexican women as throwaway bodies is on display and is highly enforced.[33] By focusing on the border region that is made up of the maquiladoras, the author hopes to demonstrate that feminist politics should take into account how displays of different emotions and expressions enhance and perpetuate the false, negative perceptions about Mexican Americans. An analysis of the US-Mexican border as a symbol for social divisions and that is heavily policed is important to understanding the treatment of Mexican and Mexican American women in the United States and globally. The piece also reveals the various ways that American coworkers subjected these Mexican women to discrimination at work and how women who work in the maquiladora labor force are not given any respect due to the fact that they are treated horribly and earn pitiful pay. Finally, the article demonstrates why this occurs in Mexico and what are ways to address it.[34]

The Han Young Case Edit

The Han Young maquiladora was a plant in Tijuana, MX, that manufactured car parts for Hyundai. In 1997, what started as a complaint by a single injured worker turned into a years-long conflict where employees protested for their right to unionize.[35] The struggle put the NAFTA labor side agreement to the test, but despite the workers' efforts, nothing ever came of it. The case became increasingly political and news-worthy as time went on. However, despite various US NAO hearings and transnational labor rights organizing, the workers were never able to unionize.[36] On the contrary, by the end of the conflicts, all of the laborers had been fired and the maquiladora had been moved to the other side of Tijuana.[when?] This was in the face of a Mexican federal court ruling that the strikes had been legal and in fact the corporation had violated the law.[35]

Environmental effects Edit

Both the United States and Mexican governments claim to be committed to environmental protection, yet environmental policies have not always been enforced despite the fact that⁠[37]: 42  maquilas are required to be certified and to provide an environmental impact statement. In Mexico, most maquiladoras are global players that use international standards for waste treatment and disposal that exceed Mexican requirements and that require any waste generated to be re-exported. The La Paz Agreement signed by Mexico and the United States in 1983 requires hazardous waste created by United States corporations to be transported back to the United States for disposal. However, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reports that only 91 of the 600 maquiladoras located along the Texas–Mexico border have returned hazardous waste to the United States since 1987.[38] The United States Geological Survey, the state of California, and the Imperial County Health Department—among others[39]—have all asserted that the New River, which flows from Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico near the Mexico–United States border into California's Salton Sea, is "the dirtiest river in America". The presence of toxic waste in towns near maquila factories has led to negative health outcomes for the people living there. Between 1988 and 1992, 163 children in Juarez were born without brains due to the toxic chemicals from factories. [26]

Improvement Edit

There have been some improvement at the corporate level of environmental policy. As of the early 2000s, around 90% of maquiladoras had attained an environmental certification. This push to improve environmental policy was led by the Mexican government, not the international companies themselves.[40] The EPA's US–Mexico Border 2012 Program has an extensive plan to help with environmental issues along that border.[41]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Caves, R. W. (2004). Encyclopedia of the City. Routledge. p. 450. ISBN 9780415252256.
  2. ^ Sklair, L. (1993). Assembling For Development: The Maquila Industry in Mexico and the United States. San Diego: The Center for U.S.–Mexican Studies University of California. p. 10.
  3. ^ [mexicanborder.web.unc.edu/the-bracero-program-3/ "The Bracero Program"]. Borders and Borderlands. Retrieved 2018-11-25. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  4. ^ Cohen, Deborah (2011). Braceros: Migrant Citizens and Transnational Subjects in the Postwar United States and Mexico. University of North Carolina Press.
  5. ^ Carillo, Jorge; Zarate, Robert (2009). "The Evolution of Maquiladora Best Practices:1965-2008". Journal of Business Ethics. 88: 335–348. doi:10.1007/s10551-009-0285-8. JSTOR 27749708. S2CID 154821506.
  6. ^ a b Sklair, Leslie (1993). Assembling for Development. The Center for U.S.-Mexican Studies University of California.
  7. ^ The Human Race: Escaping From History. Employee turnover is also relatively high, p. 52.
  8. ^ Gonzalez-Baz, Aureliano. "Manufacturing in Mexico: The Mexico In-Bond (Maquila) Program". Retrieved 2018-11-25.
  9. ^ a b c Navarro, Stephanie (2014). "Inside Mexico's Maquiladoras: Manufacturing Health Disparities" (PDF). Stanford Medicine.
  10. ^ Louie, Miriam C.Y. (2001). Sweatshop warriors: immigrant women workers take on the global factory. South End Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-89608-638-8.
  11. ^ Larudee, Mehrene. "Causes of Growth and Decline in Mexico's Apparel Sector." International Review of Applied Economics, Vol 21, September 2007. pp539-559.
  12. ^ Truett, Lila and Truett, Dale. "NAFTA and the Maquiladoras: Boon or Bane." Contemporary Economic Policy, Vol 25, July 2007. pp374-386
  13. ^ a b c Vietor, Richard H.K. and Veytsman, Alexander. "American Outsourcing." Harvard Business School Case Study No. 9-705-037, rev. February 2, 2007 (Boston, MA: HBS Publishing, 2005), p. 6. "The devaluation of the peso in 1994, which overnight reduced all peso-denominated manufacturing costs including energy and labor, improving the profitability of the maquiladoras, explains the growth spurt more than the changes in duties that were the result of NAFTA. US tariffs were already low, and Mexican duties were already not charged to maquiladoras."
  14. ^ Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, The Impact of the Maquiladora Industry on U.S. Border Cities, 2011
  15. ^ a b Stoddard, Ellwyn R. Maquila: Assembly Plants in Northern Mexico. p. 2.
  16. ^ a b Shorris, Earl. The Life and Times of Mexico. p. 531
  17. ^ Hausman, Angela and Diana L Haytko. Cross-border Supply Chain Relationships: Interpretive Research of Maquiladora Realized Strategies. p. 25.
  18. ^ Villalobos, J Rene, et al. Inbound for Mexico. p. 38.
  19. ^ Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Did NAFTA Really Cause Mexico's High Maquiladora Growth?, July 2001
  20. ^ Gruben, William C. and Sherry L. Kiser. The Border Economy: NAFTA and Maquiladoras: Is the Growth Connected?
  21. ^ Domínguez, Edmé; Icaza, Rosalba; Quintero, Cirila; López, Silvia; Stenman, Åsa (2010). "Women Workers in the Maquiladoras and the Debate on Global Labor Standards". Feminist Economics. 16 (4): 185–209. doi:10.1080/13545701.2010.530603. ISSN 1354-5701. S2CID 154778338.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Aguilar, Delia D., Lacsamana, Anne E. (2004). Women and Globalization. New York: Humanity Books. ISBN 978-1591021629.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  23. ^ Livingston, Jessica (2004). "Murder in Juárez Gender, Sexual Violence, and the Global Assembly Line". Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. 25 (1): 59–76. doi:10.1353/fro.2004.0034. JSTOR 3347254. S2CID 144659311.
  24. ^ Kopinak, Kathryn (1995). "Gender as a Vehicle for the Subordination of Women Maquiladora Workers in Mexico". Latin American Perspectives. 22: 36. doi:10.1177/0094582x9502200103. S2CID 144173129.
  25. ^ Minimum wage, Zeta, December 31, 2014. Retrieved 22 January 2016.
  26. ^ a b c d Bacon, David (205). "The Maquiladora Workers of Juarez Find Their Voice". The Nation.
  27. ^ a b "Mexico's Maquiladoras: Abuses Against Women Workers". Human Rights Watch. 1996-08-17.
  28. ^ Zaragoza, Barbara (2014). "A Tour of Tijuana'a Maquiladoras". San Diego Free Press.
  29. ^ González-López, Gloria; Cabrera, Lydia Cordero (2021). "The Borders of #MeToo: A Conversation about Sexual Violence Against Women in Ciudad Juárez". Feminist Formations. 33 (3): 333–350. doi:10.1353/ff.2021.0054. ISSN 2151-7371. S2CID 245505618.
  30. ^ Segato, Rita Laura (2008-04-01). "La escritura en el cuerpo de las mujeres asesinadas en Cd. Juárez: territorio, soberanía y crímenes de segundo estado". Debate Feminista. 37. doi:10.22201/cieg.2594066xe.2008.37.1354. ISSN 2594-066X.
  31. ^ Segato, Rita Laura (August 2014). "Las nuevas formas de la guerra y el cuerpo de las mujeres". Sociedade e Estado. 29 (2): 341–371. doi:10.1590/S0102-69922014000200003. ISSN 0102-6992.
  32. ^ Segato, Rita Laura; Monque, Pedro (2021). "Gender and Coloniality: From Low-Intensity Communal Patriarchy to High-Intensity Colonial-Modern Patriarchy". Hypatia. 36 (4): 781–799. doi:10.1017/hyp.2021.58. ISSN 0887-5367. S2CID 245007536.
  33. ^ Mize, Ronald L. 2008. “Interrogating Race, Class, Gender and Capitalism Along the U.S.-Mexico Border: Neoliberal Nativism and Maquila Modes of Production.” Race, Gender & Class 15(1/2):134–55.
  34. ^ Wright, Melissa (1998). "Maquiladora Mestizos and a Feminist Border Politics: Revisiting Anzaldúa". Hypatia. 13 (3): 114–131. doi:10.1111/j.1527-2001.1998.tb01373.x. ISSN 0887-5367. S2CID 143950461.
  35. ^ a b Williams, H. L. (2003-12-01). "Of Labor Tragedy and Legal Farce: The Han Young Factory Struggle in Tijuana, Mexico". Social Science History. 27 (4): 525–550. doi:10.1215/01455532-27-4-525. ISSN 0145-5532. S2CID 246274258.
  36. ^ "Testing NAFTA's Labor Side Agreement". NACLA. Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  37. ^ Kamel, Rachel; Hoffman, Anya (1999). The maquiladora reader : cross-border organizing since NAFTA. Philadelphia, PA: American Friends Service Committee. ISBN 978-0-9100-8235-8. OCLC 647067991. Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002.
  38. ^ Kelly, Mary E. Free Trade: The Politics of Toxic Waste. p. 48
  39. ^ (PDF). Regional Water Quality Control Board. December 1, 1998. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 25, 2007. Retrieved February 16, 2007.
  40. ^ Carrillo, Jorge; Zárate, Robert (2009). "The Evolution of Maquiladora Best Practices: 1965-2008". Journal of Business Ethics. 88: 335–348. doi:10.1007/s10551-009-0285-8. JSTOR 27749708. S2CID 154821506.
  41. ^ US-Mexico Border 2012 Program 2008-05-03 at the Wayback Machine

Further reading Edit

Books Edit

  • Baklanoff, Eric N. (2008). "Yucatan: Mexico's other maquiladora frontier". In Baklanoff, Eric N.; Moseley, Edward H. (eds.). Yucatán in an era of globalization. University of Alabama Press. ISBN 978-0-8173-5476-3.
  • Broughton, Chad (2015). Boom, Bust, Exodus: The Rust Belt, the Maquilas, and a Tale of Two Cities. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199765614.
  • Shorris, Earl (2006). The Life and Times of Mexico. W.W. Norton and Company. ISBN 978-0-393-32767-0.
  • Sklair, Leslie (2011). Assembling for Development: The Maquila Industry in Mexico and the United States. Taylor & Francis.

Journal articles Edit

  • Brown, Garrett D. "Protecting Workers’ Health and Safety in the Globalizing Economy through International Trade Treaties". International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health. Apr-Jun 2005.
  • Choi, Dae Won and Martin Kenney. "The Globalization of Korean Industry: Korean Maquiladoras in Mexico." () Frontera Norte, January–July 1997. Volume 5, No. 7. p. 5-22. Article in English, abstract available in Spanish.
  • Clapp, Jennifer. Piles of Poisons: Despite NAFTA’s Green Promises, Hazardous Waste Problems are Deepening in Mexico. Alternatives Journal, Vol. 28, Iss. 2. Waterloo: Spring 2002.
  • Hampton, Elaine. Globalization Legacy: A View of U.S. Factory Involvement in Mexican Education. Multicultural Education. Summer 2004.
  • Hausman, Angela and Diana L. Haytko. Cross-Border Supply Chain Relationships: Interpretive Research of Maquiladora Realized Strategies. The Journal of Business and Industrial Marketing, Vol 18, Iss. 6/7. Santa Barbara: 2003
  • Moffatt, Allison. Murder, Mystery and Mistreatment in Mexican Maquiladoras. Women & Environments International Magazines 66 (2006): 19.
  • Villalobos, J. Rene, et al., Inbound for Mexico. Industrial Engineer. Norcross: April 2004. Vol. 36, Iss. 4.

Government/NGO reports Edit

  • Gruben, William C. and Sherry L. Kiser. The Border Economy: NAFTA and Maquiladoras: Is the Growth Connected? Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. June 2001.
  • Human Rights Watch. No Guarantees: Sex Discrimination in Mexico’s Maquiladora Sector. The Maquiladora Reader. Philadelphia: Mexico-U.S. Border Program, 1999.

News Edit

  • Article on worker-run maquiladora in El Salvador

Music Edit

  • Maquiladora - Radiohead

Video Edit

  • Campbell, Monica. Maquiladoras: Rethinking NAFTA. PBS, 2002.
  • The Human Race: Escaping From History. dir. Josh Freed. Green Lion Productions Inc., videocassette, 1994.
  • Maquilapolis Documentary

External links Edit

  • CorpWatch, Maquiladoras at a Glance. June 30, 1999.

lang, maquiladora, maquiladora, spanish, makilaˈðoɾa, maquila, maˈkila, word, that, refers, factories, that, largely, duty, free, tariff, free, these, factories, take, materials, assemble, manufacture, process, them, export, finished, product, these, factories. A maquiladora Spanish makilaˈdoɾa or maquila IPA maˈkila is a word that refers to factories that are largely duty free and tariff free These factories take raw materials and assemble manufacture or process them and export the finished product These factories and systems are present throughout Latin America including Mexico Paraguay Nicaragua and El Salvador Maquiladoras date back to 1964 when the Mexican government introduced the Programa de Industrializacion Fronteriza Border Industrialization Program 1 Specific programs and laws have made Mexico s maquila industry grow rapidly 2 A maquila in Mexico Contents 1 History 1 1 NAFTA 1 2 The 2000s 2 Growth and Development 2 1 Globalization 3 Women 3 1 Women enter the Labor Force and Face Inequality through Different Means 3 2 Gendered Violence in the Maquiladora Labor Force 3 3 Drawbacks associated with Unionization 3 4 Effects on the Mexican American Border 3 5 The Han Young Case 4 Environmental effects 4 1 Improvement 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 7 1 Books 7 2 Journal articles 7 3 Government NGO reports 7 4 News 7 5 Music 7 6 Video 8 External linksHistory EditFrom 1942 to 1964 the Bracero program allowed men with farming experience to work on US farms on a seasonal basis and its end ushered in a new era for the development of Mexico 3 4 The Border Industrialization Program BIP began in 1965 and allowed for a lowering in restrictions and duties on machinery equipment and raw materials Before this program PRONAF a national border program for infrastructure developments like building roads parks electricity water building factories and cleaning up border cities helped to improve situations along the US Mexico Border With BIP foreign firms were able to use factories built under PRONAF to import raw materials and export goods for a cheaper cost than in other countries 5 6 One of the main goals of the Border Industrialization Program was to attract foreign investment 7 In 1989 the federal government put in place specific procedures and requirements for maquilas under the Decree for Development and Operation of the Maquiladora Industry 8 After the Mexican debt crisis of 1980 the economy liberalized and foreign investment increased Factory jobs began to leave central Mexico and workers followed the jobs from central Mexico to the maquilas in the north and on the border 9 In 1985 maquiladoras overtook tourism as the largest source of foreign exchange and since 1996 they have been the second largest industry in Mexico behind the petroleum industry 10 NAFTA Edit With the introduction of NAFTA in 1994 Northern Mexico became an export processing zone This allowed multinational corporations from the US to produce products cheaply Corporations could use a maquila to import materials and produce a good more cheaply than in the US by paying Mexican laborers lower wages and paying less in duties Mexicans work for approximately one sixth of the U S hourly rate 9 During the five years before NAFTA maquila employment had grown at a rate of 47 this figure increased to 86 in the next five years The number of factories also increased dramatically Between 1989 and 1994 564 new plants opened in the five years following 1460 plants opened However the maquiladora growth is largely attributable to growth in US demand and devaluation of the peso not NAFTA itself 11 12 13 In the 1970s most maquiladoras were located around the Mexico United States border By 1994 these were spread in the interior parts of the country although the majority of the plants were still near the border citation needed The 2000s Edit A 2011 Federal Reserve report indicated that the maquiladora industry affects U S border city employment in service sectors 14 Although the maquiladora industry suffered due to the early 2000s recession maquiladoras constituted 54 of the US Mexico trade in 2004 and by 2005 the maquiladora exports accounted for half of Mexico s exports 13 In the 2000s the maquila industry faced competition due to rise of other countries with availability of cheap labor including Malaysia India and Pakistan The biggest threat came from China s Special Economic Areas 13 Growth and Development EditDuring the later half of the 1960s maquiladora industries rapidly expanded geographically and economically and by 1985 had become Mexico s second largest source of income from exports behind oil 15 Since 1973 maquiladoras have also accounted for nearly half of Mexico s export assembly 15 Between 1995 and 2000 exports of assembled products in Mexico tripled and the rate of the industry s growth amounted to about one new factory per day 16 By the late twentieth century the industry accounted for 25 percent of Mexico s gross domestic product and 17 percent of total Mexican employment 17 Globalization Edit Since globalization and physical restructuring citation needed have contributed to the competition and advent of low cost offshore assembly in places such as China and countries in Central America maquiladoras in Mexico have been on the decline since 2000 According to federal sources approximately 529 maquiladoras shut down and investment in assembly plants decreased by 8 2 percent in 2002 after the imposition of countervailing duties on Chinese products not available in North America that were part of the electronics supply chain 16 Despite the decline over 3 000 maquiladoras still exist along the 2 000 mile long United States Mexico border providing employment for approximately one million workers and importing more than 51 billion in supplies into Mexico 18 Research indicates that maquiladoras post NAFTA growth is connected to changes in Mexican wages relative to those in Asia and in the United States and to fluctuations in U S industrial production 19 As of 2006 maquiladoras still accounted for 45 percent of Mexico s exports 20 Maquiladoras in general are best represented among operations that are particularly assembly intensive citation needed The benefits and drawbacks of export oriented industrial vocations for women as well as how international labor standards affect these occupations The goal of this piece is to challenge ideas that portray export based industrial occupations as respectable choices for women in Mexico and Central America as well as to cast doubt on the idea that global labor standards may serve as a substitute for bettering working conditions This article is based on extensive research on women in Mexico s and Central America s maquiladoras and emphasizes three interconnected issues the importance of local and regional settings that shape various industrialization trajectories across time the agency represented by women workers and the legal tools already set in place in efforts to improve working conditions 21 Women EditWomen enter the Labor Force and Face Inequality through Different Means Edit Women entered the labor force in Mexico in large numbers in the latter half of the 20th century Devaluations of the peso in 1982 and 1994 pushed many Mexican women into the labor force Between 1970 and 1995 18 more women were part of the working force 22 and many of these women were working in maquila factories Women looked for work in factories because they could get jobs with few credentials and receive on the job training 22 Men working in maquilas were given positions of supervision management engineers and technical jobs while women were relegated to low skill jobs 22 6 Young women tended to be hired more often than older women but it depended on the circumstances of the job and type of factory However young single women often ended up in factories with better working conditions like the electronics plants while older women and mothers worked in more dangerous apparel factories 22 Gender plays a key role in both disguising and preserving economic frustration in the city of Juarez Mexico Given that several women are brutally murdered in Mexico with Juarez as one of the main city targets it is essential to look into the orientations of male authority cheap labor exploitation and the maquiladoras export processing zone Oftentimes young women are murdered as a result of economic frustration being directed at the maquiladora workers Working women are viewed by the maquiladora system as cheap labor and easily replaceable which makes it easy and acceptable to kill these women without consequences In order to examine the relationship between gender and production gender and violence this article focuses on situating the killings of these women within their social and ideological contexts In this piece the reasons for these women s treatment and the social justifications for it are examined 23 Poverty is a key factor that motivates women to work in maquiladoras The minimum wage set by the Mexican government is barely enough to help sustain a family even with both parents working The minimum wage buys only about a quarter of the basic necessities that are essential for a typical worker s family 24 Maquilas pay at much higher rate than the minimum wage in most markets since there is a lot of competition for the best workers and workers will not work without transportation and other bonuses The 2015 minimum wage was 70 1 pesos per day in Tijuana minimum wages vary by zone and worker classification or about 0 55 per hour at the 2016 exchange rate of 16 pesos per dollar 25 while most entry level positions in maquilas paid closer to 2 per hour including bonuses and 25 being paid to Social Security housing and retirement Even in maquila factories wages are still very low and in many families the children are encouraged to start working at an early age to support the family 22 In some maquiladoras workers are cut and their responsibilities are given to a single worker These workers are not given a higher pay and are expected to maintain their output without a decrease in quality They often work involuntary overtimes and are often not paid for their extra labor 22 Gendered Violence in the Maquiladora Labor Force Edit Allegedly women are not allowed to be pregnant while working Some maquilas require female workers to take pregnancy tests Some require that workers resign if they are pregnant 9 26 Female applicants are made to take pregnancy tests and are only hired if not pregnant and women that become pregnant while working at maquila factories are given more strenuous tasks and forced to work unpaid overtime to influence them to resign 22 27 The Humans Rights Watch wrote a report in 1996 about the failures of the government to address this issue despite the fact that pregnancy testing violates Mexican federal labor law 27 These practices have continued into the 21st century 28 Once on the job many women face sexual harassment by supervisors and find no help from human resources 26 Due to the cruel and horrific appearances of violence against women in Mexican society feminists have been working at the community level to end sexual violence against women in Ciudad Juarez Mexico many years before the MeToo movement was even conceived Sociologists and feminists wonder whether the MeToo movement has already taken root in Mexico and if so how Sociologists and feminists ask themselves questions such as Has Ciudad Juarez s MeToo movement made an influence on women s lives there If so by how much and why This article explores the significance of maquiladoras and how the working conditions there have impacted women as well by allowing the exploitation of women Finally the article successfully communicates all of its ideas through a thorough discussion between its authors 29 Rita Segato is an Argentine Brazilian scholar who also identifies as a feminist and has a sociological point of view makes an effort to make sense of the femicides that occur in Ciudad Juarez Segato examines the violence bigotry and ego with which Mexican men treat their women These women are typically young ladies who are small dark skinned with long hair and work largely in the maquiladora labor force In comparison to other parts of Mexico Ciudad Juarez is a risky place for women to live These Mexican men view these women s bodies as throwaway and erasable objects that they can use anyway they choose As if that weren t clear the bodies of women from the Mexican border continue to be consumed by misogyny that has reached the most dreadful level of brutality 30 Many women are injured in maquilas Intense work pace and pressure on high production leads to injuries including upper back neck and shoulder pain Many maquilas do not report accidents and workers are not compensated for injuries received on the job 22 Workplace hazards include toxic chemicals and workplaces lack health and safety practices like ventilation and face masks 22 The men in authority severely exploit these women which makes matters worse Drawbacks associated with Unionization Edit Labor unions exist in maquiladoras but many are charro unions which are government supported and not in the interest of the worker Official unions discredit maquiladora workers by calling them agitators 22 Workers who complain can be fired and blacklisted from other jobs Many contracts are only for a few months allowing companies to have a high turn over rate in which workers never have the chance to organize for their rights 22 Many tried to organize independent unions but often failed Rita Segato investigates the historical changes associated with war and the essential role that inhumanity obtains in it toward people who do not participate in the conflict such as women and children According to Segato violence against women has stopped being an outcome of war but instead has turned into a strategic goal Governed by armed corporations with the participation of state and para state forces this is where the new forms of conflict take place Tragically women and children have become victims of both physical abuse bodily mutilation body trafficking and commercialization 31 In 1993 the Mexican labor federation the Authentic Labor Front and the United Electrical Workers worked together to improve conditions at the General Electric factory but failed in the loss of an election The Center for Labor Studies CETLAC was opened in the mid 1990s and worked to educate workers about their rights and activism decreased in light of violence against women In Juarez between 1993 and 2005 more than 370 women were murdered In 2010 more than 370 women were murdered A new wave of worker protests has emerged in the 21st Century as workers decide that enough is enough In 2015 in Juarez maquiladora workers set up encampments plantons to protest and demand independent unions 26 Rita Segato argues using a de colonial feminist viewpoint that contends that patriarchal political structures existed in communal societies prior to colonialism According to Segato the modern gender system s capture the changes of pre colonial dual gender structures which worsen inequality boosts violence against women and depoliticizes them To Segato pre colonial gender differs significantly from colonial modern societies gender structures which operate in terms of a beneficiary and its subordinated others In this article Segato focuses on the patriarchal institutions of Ciudad Juarez Mexico and Brazil s National Indian Foundation FUNAI to extensively analyze and characterize these preexisting structures 32 Effects on the Mexican American Border Edit Neoliberalism has been placed in the framework of the U S Mexico border region and it is highly stratified by race class and gender This article explores the categories of race class gender and capitalism and how they exist in the neoliberal maquiladoras of Mexico The article also discusses how the racialization of individuals living south of the border underlies and reinforces the prosecution of illegal aliens and how it puts Mexican women and children in danger The racialization and gendering of the maquiladora workplace is also explored alongside the work process of U S distribution centers and the supply chain of commodities In the city of Juarez where women have been brutally murdered as a result of the maquiladora killings the heartless mindset of regarding Mexican women as throwaway bodies is on display and is highly enforced 33 By focusing on the border region that is made up of the maquiladoras the author hopes to demonstrate that feminist politics should take into account how displays of different emotions and expressions enhance and perpetuate the false negative perceptions about Mexican Americans An analysis of the US Mexican border as a symbol for social divisions and that is heavily policed is important to understanding the treatment of Mexican and Mexican American women in the United States and globally The piece also reveals the various ways that American coworkers subjected these Mexican women to discrimination at work and how women who work in the maquiladora labor force are not given any respect due to the fact that they are treated horribly and earn pitiful pay Finally the article demonstrates why this occurs in Mexico and what are ways to address it 34 The Han Young Case Edit The Han Young maquiladora was a plant in Tijuana MX that manufactured car parts for Hyundai In 1997 what started as a complaint by a single injured worker turned into a years long conflict where employees protested for their right to unionize 35 The struggle put the NAFTA labor side agreement to the test but despite the workers efforts nothing ever came of it The case became increasingly political and news worthy as time went on However despite various US NAO hearings and transnational labor rights organizing the workers were never able to unionize 36 On the contrary by the end of the conflicts all of the laborers had been fired and the maquiladora had been moved to the other side of Tijuana when This was in the face of a Mexican federal court ruling that the strikes had been legal and in fact the corporation had violated the law 35 Environmental effects EditBoth the United States and Mexican governments claim to be committed to environmental protection yet environmental policies have not always been enforced despite the fact that 37 42 maquilas are required to be certified and to provide an environmental impact statement In Mexico most maquiladoras are global players that use international standards for waste treatment and disposal that exceed Mexican requirements and that require any waste generated to be re exported The La Paz Agreement signed by Mexico and the United States in 1983 requires hazardous waste created by United States corporations to be transported back to the United States for disposal However the United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA reports that only 91 of the 600 maquiladoras located along the Texas Mexico border have returned hazardous waste to the United States since 1987 38 The United States Geological Survey the state of California and the Imperial County Health Department among others 39 have all asserted that the New River which flows from Mexicali Baja California Mexico near the Mexico United States border into California s Salton Sea is the dirtiest river in America The presence of toxic waste in towns near maquila factories has led to negative health outcomes for the people living there Between 1988 and 1992 163 children in Juarez were born without brains due to the toxic chemicals from factories 26 Improvement Edit There have been some improvement at the corporate level of environmental policy As of the early 2000s around 90 of maquiladoras had attained an environmental certification This push to improve environmental policy was led by the Mexican government not the international companies themselves 40 The EPA s US Mexico Border 2012 Program has an extensive plan to help with environmental issues along that border 41 See also Edit nbsp Mexico portalDominican Republic Central America Free Trade Agreement Economy of Mexico Free Trade Area of the Americas Free trade Globalization Colonia Mexico Latin American economy List of free trade zones Maquila Decree Maquila Solidarity NetworkReferences Edit Caves R W 2004 Encyclopedia of the City Routledge p 450 ISBN 9780415252256 Sklair L 1993 Assembling For Development The Maquila Industry in Mexico and the United States San Diego The Center for U S Mexican Studies University of California p 10 mexicanborder web unc edu the bracero program 3 The Bracero Program Borders and Borderlands Retrieved 2018 11 25 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Check url value help Cohen Deborah 2011 Braceros Migrant Citizens and Transnational Subjects in the Postwar United States and Mexico University of North Carolina Press Carillo Jorge Zarate Robert 2009 The Evolution of Maquiladora Best Practices 1965 2008 Journal of Business Ethics 88 335 348 doi 10 1007 s10551 009 0285 8 JSTOR 27749708 S2CID 154821506 a b Sklair Leslie 1993 Assembling for Development The Center for U S Mexican Studies University of California The Human Race Escaping From History Employee turnover is also relatively high p 52 Gonzalez Baz Aureliano Manufacturing in Mexico The Mexico In Bond Maquila Program Retrieved 2018 11 25 a b c Navarro Stephanie 2014 Inside Mexico s Maquiladoras Manufacturing Health Disparities PDF Stanford Medicine Louie Miriam C Y 2001 Sweatshop warriors immigrant women workers take on the global factory South End Press p 69 ISBN 978 0 89608 638 8 Larudee Mehrene Causes of Growth and Decline in Mexico s Apparel Sector International Review of Applied Economics Vol 21 September 2007 pp539 559 Truett Lila and Truett Dale NAFTA and the Maquiladoras Boon or Bane Contemporary Economic Policy Vol 25 July 2007 pp374 386 a b c Vietor Richard H K and Veytsman Alexander American Outsourcing Harvard Business School Case Study No 9 705 037 rev February 2 2007 Boston MA HBS Publishing 2005 p 6 The devaluation of the peso in 1994 which overnight reduced all peso denominated manufacturing costs including energy and labor improving the profitability of the maquiladoras explains the growth spurt more than the changes in duties that were the result of NAFTA US tariffs were already low and Mexican duties were already not charged to maquiladoras Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas The Impact of the Maquiladora Industry on U S Border Cities 2011 a b Stoddard Ellwyn R Maquila Assembly Plants in Northern Mexico p 2 a b Shorris Earl The Life and Times of Mexico p 531 Hausman Angela and Diana L Haytko Cross border Supply Chain Relationships Interpretive Research of Maquiladora Realized Strategies p 25 Villalobos J Rene et al Inbound for Mexico p 38 Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Did NAFTA Really Cause Mexico s High Maquiladora Growth July 2001 Gruben William C and Sherry L Kiser The Border Economy NAFTA and Maquiladoras Is the Growth Connected Dominguez Edme Icaza Rosalba Quintero Cirila Lopez Silvia Stenman Asa 2010 Women Workers in the Maquiladoras and the Debate on Global Labor Standards Feminist Economics 16 4 185 209 doi 10 1080 13545701 2010 530603 ISSN 1354 5701 S2CID 154778338 a b c d e f g h i j k Aguilar Delia D Lacsamana Anne E 2004 Women and Globalization New York Humanity Books ISBN 978 1591021629 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Livingston Jessica 2004 Murder in Juarez Gender Sexual Violence and the Global Assembly Line Frontiers A Journal of Women Studies 25 1 59 76 doi 10 1353 fro 2004 0034 JSTOR 3347254 S2CID 144659311 Kopinak Kathryn 1995 Gender as a Vehicle for the Subordination of Women Maquiladora Workers in Mexico Latin American Perspectives 22 36 doi 10 1177 0094582x9502200103 S2CID 144173129 Minimum wage Zeta December 31 2014 Retrieved 22 January 2016 a b c d Bacon David 205 The Maquiladora Workers of Juarez Find Their Voice The Nation a b Mexico s Maquiladoras Abuses Against Women Workers Human Rights Watch 1996 08 17 Zaragoza Barbara 2014 A Tour of Tijuana a Maquiladoras San Diego Free Press Gonzalez Lopez Gloria Cabrera Lydia Cordero 2021 The Borders of MeToo A Conversation about Sexual Violence Against Women in Ciudad Juarez Feminist Formations 33 3 333 350 doi 10 1353 ff 2021 0054 ISSN 2151 7371 S2CID 245505618 Segato Rita Laura 2008 04 01 La escritura en el cuerpo de las mujeres asesinadas en Cd Juarez territorio soberania y crimenes de segundo estado Debate Feminista 37 doi 10 22201 cieg 2594066xe 2008 37 1354 ISSN 2594 066X Segato Rita Laura August 2014 Las nuevas formas de la guerra y el cuerpo de las mujeres Sociedade e Estado 29 2 341 371 doi 10 1590 S0102 69922014000200003 ISSN 0102 6992 Segato Rita Laura Monque Pedro 2021 Gender and Coloniality From Low Intensity Communal Patriarchy to High Intensity Colonial Modern Patriarchy Hypatia 36 4 781 799 doi 10 1017 hyp 2021 58 ISSN 0887 5367 S2CID 245007536 Mize Ronald L 2008 Interrogating Race Class Gender and Capitalism Along the U S Mexico Border Neoliberal Nativism and Maquila Modes of Production Race Gender amp Class 15 1 2 134 55 Wright Melissa 1998 Maquiladora Mestizos and a Feminist Border Politics Revisiting Anzaldua Hypatia 13 3 114 131 doi 10 1111 j 1527 2001 1998 tb01373 x ISSN 0887 5367 S2CID 143950461 a b Williams H L 2003 12 01 Of Labor Tragedy and Legal Farce The Han Young Factory Struggle in Tijuana Mexico Social Science History 27 4 525 550 doi 10 1215 01455532 27 4 525 ISSN 0145 5532 S2CID 246274258 Testing NAFTA s Labor Side Agreement NACLA Retrieved 2018 11 17 Kamel Rachel Hoffman Anya 1999 The maquiladora reader cross border organizing since NAFTA Philadelphia PA American Friends Service Committee ISBN 978 0 9100 8235 8 OCLC 647067991 Master and use copy Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials Version 1 Digital Library Federation December 2002 Kelly Mary E Free Trade The Politics of Toxic Waste p 48 New River Pollution in Mexico A Historical Overview PDF Regional Water Quality Control Board December 1 1998 Archived from the original PDF on October 25 2007 Retrieved February 16 2007 Carrillo Jorge Zarate Robert 2009 The Evolution of Maquiladora Best Practices 1965 2008 Journal of Business Ethics 88 335 348 doi 10 1007 s10551 009 0285 8 JSTOR 27749708 S2CID 154821506 US Mexico Border 2012 Program Archived 2008 05 03 at the Wayback MachineFurther reading EditBooks Edit Baklanoff Eric N 2008 Yucatan Mexico s other maquiladora frontier In Baklanoff Eric N Moseley Edward H eds Yucatan in an era of globalization University of Alabama Press ISBN 978 0 8173 5476 3 Broughton Chad 2015 Boom Bust Exodus The Rust Belt the Maquilas and a Tale of Two Cities Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199765614 Shorris Earl 2006 The Life and Times of Mexico W W Norton and Company ISBN 978 0 393 32767 0 Sklair Leslie 2011 Assembling for Development The Maquila Industry in Mexico and the United States Taylor amp Francis Journal articles Edit Brown Garrett D Protecting Workers Health and Safety in the Globalizing Economy through International Trade Treaties International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health Apr Jun 2005 Choi Dae Won and Martin Kenney The Globalization of Korean Industry Korean Maquiladoras in Mexico Archive Frontera Norte January July 1997 Volume 5 No 7 p 5 22 Article in English abstract available in Spanish Clapp Jennifer Piles of Poisons Despite NAFTA s Green Promises Hazardous Waste Problems are Deepening in Mexico Alternatives Journal Vol 28 Iss 2 Waterloo Spring 2002 Hampton Elaine Globalization Legacy A View of U S Factory Involvement in Mexican Education Multicultural Education Summer 2004 Hausman Angela and Diana L Haytko Cross Border Supply Chain Relationships Interpretive Research of Maquiladora Realized Strategies The Journal of Business and Industrial Marketing Vol 18 Iss 6 7 Santa Barbara 2003 Moffatt Allison Murder Mystery and Mistreatment in Mexican Maquiladoras Women amp Environments International Magazines 66 2006 19 Villalobos J Rene et al Inbound for Mexico Industrial Engineer Norcross April 2004 Vol 36 Iss 4 Government NGO reports Edit Gruben William C and Sherry L Kiser The Border Economy NAFTA and Maquiladoras Is the Growth Connected Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas June 2001 Human Rights Watch No Guarantees Sex Discrimination in Mexico s Maquiladora Sector The Maquiladora Reader Philadelphia Mexico U S Border Program 1999 News Edit Article on worker run maquiladora in El SalvadorMusic Edit Maquiladora RadioheadVideo Edit Campbell Monica Maquiladoras Rethinking NAFTA PBS 2002 The Human Race Escaping From History dir Josh Freed Green Lion Productions Inc videocassette 1994 Maquilapolis DocumentaryExternal links EditMaquiladora Slavery Archived 2022 05 27 at the Wayback Machine June 1 2009 nbsp Look up maquiladora in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maquiladora CorpWatch Maquiladoras at a Glance June 30 1999 International Museum of Women Feature on Maquiladoras Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maquiladora amp oldid 1175007988, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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