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Mexican Americans

Mexican Americans (Spanish: mexicano estadounidenses, mexico americanos, or estadounidenses de origen mexicano) are Americans of full or partial Mexican heritage.[11] In 2019, Mexican Americans comprised 11.3% of the US population and 61.5% of all Hispanic and Latino Americans.[12] In 2019, 71% of Mexican Americans were born in the United States,[12] though they make up 53% of the total population of foreign-born Latino Americans and 25% of the total foreign-born population.[13] The United States is home to the second-largest Mexican community in the world (24% of the entire Mexican-origin population of the world), behind only Mexico.[14] Most Mexican Americans reside in the Southwest (over 60% in the states of California and Texas).[15][16][17][18][19][20]

Mexican Americans
mexicanos estadounidenses (Spanish)
Percent of population of Mexican descent in 2010[1]
Total population
10,697,374 (by birth, 2021)[2]
37,235,886 (by ancestry, 2021)[3]
11.2% of total US population, 2021[3]
Regions with significant populations
(also growing/emerging populations in
Languages
Religion
Predominantly Catholicism[10]
Related ethnic groups
Hispanos (Californios, Neomexicanos, Tejanos, Floridanos), Spanish Americans, Chicanos, other Latino Americans, Native Americans in the United States

Most Mexican Americans have varying degrees of Indigenous and European ancestry, with the latter being mostly Spanish origins.[21] Those of indigenous ancestry descend from one or more of the over 60 indigenous groups in Mexico (approximately 200,000 people in California alone).[22] It is estimated that approximately 10% of the current Mexican American population are descended from early Mexican residents such as New Mexican Hispanos, Tejanos and Californios, who became US citizens in 1848 through the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ended the Mexican–American War. Mexicans living in the United States after the treaty was signed were forced to choose between keeping their Mexican citizenship or becoming a US citizen. Few chose to leave their homes in the States.[1] The majority of these Hispanophone populations eventually adopted English as their first language and became Americanized.[23] Also called Hispanos, these descendants of independent Mexico from the early to middle 19th century differentiate themselves culturally from the population of Mexican Americans whose ancestors arrived in the American Southwest after the Mexican Revolution.[24][25]

Although most of the Mexican American population was considered white by the Treaty, many continued to face discrimination in the form of Anti-Mexican sentiment, noted in the idea that Mexicans were "too Indian" to be citizens.[26] Despite assurances to the contrary, the property rights of formerly Mexican citizens were often not honored by the US government.[27][28][29] Continuous large-scale migration, particularly after the 1910 Mexican Revolution, added to this population. During the Great Depression, many Mexican Americans were repatriated or deported to Mexico. An estimated 355,000 to 1 million people were repatriated in total, 40–60% of whom were US citizens – overwhelmingly children.[30][31][32][33][34] Critical race theorist Ian Haney López, posited that in the 1930s, "community leaders promoted the term Mexican American to convey an assimilationist ideology stressing white identity" and that by the 1940s and 1950s, the community had fractured over the issue of cultural assimilation with some anti-assimilationist youth rejecting Mexican American and instead developed an "alienated pachuco culture that fashioned itself neither as Mexican nor American"[35] while others developed a more assimilationist stance by promoting the Mexican American identity "as a white ethnic group that had little in common with African Americans."[36] The anti-assimilationist challenge to Mexican American identity would form the basis of Chicano/a identity in the 1960s, which itself was influenced by the reclamation of Black by African Americans.[37][38] Although Chicano/a had previously been used as a classist and racial slur to refer to working class Mexican American people in Spanish-speaking neighborhoods, the Chicano Movement reclaimed the term to promote cultural revitalization and community empowerment in the 1960s and 1970s.[39][40]

In the 1980s, following the decline of the Chicano Movement, assimilation and economic mobility became a goal of many Mexican Americans in an era of conservatism,[41] many of whom adopted the terms Hispanic and Latino.[42] Prior to this time, the United States Census provided no clear way for Mexican Americans to identify. On the 1980 census, the US government promoted the term Hispanic while Chicano appeared as a subcategory underneath the category of Spanish/Hispanic descent.[43] Immigration from Mexico increased greatly during the 1980s and 1990s and peaked in the mid-2000s. With the peak of immigration in the 1980s the Immigration Amnesty was passed, letting many of the Mexican immigrants get their residency in the United States.[44] The Great Recession (2007–2009) resulted in a decline in immigration from Mexico.[45]

History of Mexican Americans

 
Symbols of the Southwest: a string of chili peppers (a ristra) and a bleached white cow's skull hang in a market near Santa Fe.

In 1900, there were slightly more than 500,000 Latinos of Mexican descent living in New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Colorado, California and Texas.[46] Most were Mexican Americans of Spanish descent and other Hispanicized European settlers who settled in the Southwest during Spanish colonial times, as well as local and Mexican Amerindians.

As early as 1813, some of the Tejanos who colonized Texas in the Spanish Colonial Period established a government in Texas that desired independence from Spanish-ruled Mexico. In those days, there was no concept of identity as Mexican. Many Mexicans were more loyal to their states/provinces than to their country as a whole, which was a colony of Spain. This was particularly true in frontier regions such as Zacatecas, Texas, Yucatán, Oaxaca, New Mexico, etc.[47]

As shown by the writings of colonial Tejanos such as Antonio Menchaca, the Texas Revolution was initially a colonial Tejano cause. Mexico encouraged immigration from the United States to settle east Texas and, by 1831, English-speaking settlers outnumbered Tejanos ten to one in the region. Both groups were settled mostly in the eastern part of the territory.[48] The Mexican government became concerned about the increasing volume of Anglo-American immigration and restricted the number of settlers from the United States allowed to enter Texas. Consistent with its abolition of slavery, the Mexican government banned slavery within the state, which angered American slave owners.[49] The American settlers, along with many of the Tejano, rebelled against the centralized authority of Mexico City and the Santa Anna regime, while other Tejano remained loyal to Mexico, and still others were neutral.[50][51]

Author John P. Schmal wrote of the effect Texas independence had on the Tejano community:

A native of San Antonio, Juan Seguín is probably the most famous Tejano to be involved in the War of Texas Independence. His story is complex because he joined the Anglo rebels and helped defeat the Mexican forces of Santa Anna. But later on, as Mayor of San Antonio, he and other Tejanos felt the hostile encroachments of the growing Anglo power against them. After receiving a series of death threats, Seguín relocated his family in Mexico, where he was coerced into military service and fought against the US in 1846–1848 Mexican–American War.[52]

Although the events of 1836 led to independence for the people of Texas, the Latino population of the state was very quickly disenfranchised, to the extent that their political representation in the Texas State Legislature disappeared entirely for several decades.

 
Mural in Chicano Park, San Diego, stating "All the way to the Bay"

As a Spanish colony, the territory of California also had an established population of colonial settlers. Californios is the term for the Spanish-speaking residents of modern-day California; they were the original Mexicans (regardless of race) and local Hispanicized Amerindians in the region (Alta California) before the United States acquired it as a territory. In the mid-19th century, more settlers from the United States began to enter the territory.

In California, Mexican settlement began in 1769 with the establishment of the Presidio and Catholic mission of San Diego. 20 more missions were established along the California coast by 1823, along with military Presidios and civilian communities. Settlers in California tended to stay close to the coast and outside of the California interior. The California economy was based on agriculture and livestock. In contrast to central New Spain, coastal colonists found little mineral wealth. Some became farmers or ranchers, working for themselves on their own land or for other colonists. Government officials, priests, soldiers, and artisans settled in towns, missions, and presidios.[53]

One of the most important events in the history of Mexican settlers in California occurred in 1833, when the Mexican Government secularized the missions. In effect this meant that the government took control of large and vast areas of land. These lands were eventually distributed among the population in the form of Ranchos, which soon became the basic socio-economic units of the province.[53]

Relations between Californios and English-speaking settlers were relatively good until 1846, when military officer John C. Fremont arrived in Alta California with a United States force of 60 men on an exploratory expedition. Fremont made an agreement with Comandante Castro that he would stay in the San Joaquin Valley only for the winter, then move north to Oregon. However, Fremont remained in the Santa Clara Valley then headed towards Monterey. When Castro demanded that Fremont leave Alta California, Fremont rode to Gavilan Peak, raised a US flag and vowed to fight to the last man to defend it. After three days of tension, Fremont retreated to Oregon without a shot being fired.

With relations between Californios and Americans quickly souring, Fremont returned to Alta California, where he encouraged European-American settlers to seize a group of Castro's soldiers and their horses. Another group seized the Presidio of Sonoma and captured Mariano Vallejo.

 
The Henry B. González Convention Center and Lila Cockrell Theater along the San Antonio River Walk. The Tower of the Americas is visible in the background.

The Americans chose William B. Ide as chosen Commander in Chief and on July 5, he proclaimed the creation of the Bear Flag Republic. On July 9, US military forces reached Sonoma; they lowered the Bear Flag Republic's flag, replacing it with a US flag. Californios organized an army to defend themselves from invading American forces after the Mexican army retreated from Alta California to defend other parts of Mexico.

The Californios defeated an American force in Los Angeles on September 30, 1846. In turn, they were defeated after the Americans reinforced their forces in what is now southern California. Tens of thousands of miners and associated people arrived during the California Gold Rush, and their activities in some areas meant the end of the Californios' ranching lifestyle. Many of the English-speaking 49ers turned from mining to farming and moved, often illegally, onto land granted to Californios by the former Mexican government.[54]

The United States had first come into conflict with Mexico in the 1830s, as the westward spread of United States settlements and of slavery brought significant numbers of new settlers into the region known as Tejas (modern-day Texas), then part of Mexico. The Mexican–American War, followed by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848 and the Gadsden Purchase in 1853, extended US control over a wide range of territory once held by Mexico, including the present-day borders of Texas and the states of New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Arizona and California.[55]

 
An example of a Chicano-themed mural in the Richard Riordan Central Library

Although the treaty promised that the landowners in this newly acquired territory would have their property rights preserved and protected as if they were citizens of the United States, many former citizens of Mexico lost their land in lawsuits before state and federal courts over terms of land grants, or as a result of legislation passed after the treaty.[56] Even those statutes which Congress passed to protect the owners of property at the time of the extension of the United States' borders, such as the 1851 California Land Act, had the effect of dispossessing Californio owners. They were ruined by the cost over years of having to maintain litigation to support their land titles.

Following the concession of California to the United States under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, Mexicans were repeatedly targeted by legislation that targeted their socio-economic standing in the area. One significant instance of this is exemplified by the passage of legislation that placed the heaviest tax burden on land. The fact that there was such a heavy tax on land was important to the socio-economic standing of Mexican Americans, because it essentially limited their ability to keep possession of the Ranchos that had been originally granted to them by the Mexican government.[53]

19th-century and Early 20th-century Mexican migration

 
The first Mexican braceros arrived in California in 1917.

In the late nineteenth century, liberal Mexican President Porfirio Díaz embarked on a program of economic modernization that triggered not only a wave of internal migration in Mexico from rural areas to cities, but also Mexican emigration to the United States. A railway network was constructed that connected central Mexico to the US border and also opened up previously isolated regions. The second factor was the shift in land tenure that left Mexican peasants without title or access to land for farming on their own account.[57] For the first time, Mexicans in increasing numbers migrated north into the United States for better economic opportunities. In the early 20th century, the first main period of migration to the United States happened between the 1910s to the 1920s, referred to as the Great Migration.[58] During this time period the Mexican Revolution was taking place, creating turmoil within and against the Mexican government causing civilians to seek out economic and political stability in the United States. Over 1.3 million Mexicans relocated to the United States from 1910 well into the 1930s, with significant increases each decade.[59] Many of these immigrants found agricultural work, being contracted under private laborers.[60]

During the great depression in the 1930s, many Mexicans and Mexican Americans were repatriated to Mexico. Many deportations were overseen by state and local authorities who acted on the encouragement of Secretary of Labor William N. Doak and the Department of Labor.[32] The government deported at least 82,000 people.[34] Between 355,000 and 1,000,000 were repatriated or deported to Mexico in total; approximately forty to sixty percent of those repatriated were birthright citizens - overwhelmingly children.[34][33] Voluntary repatriation was much more common during the repatriations than formal deportation.[34][30] According to legal professor Kevin R. Johnson, the repatriation campaign was based on ethnicity and meets the modern legal standards of ethnic cleansing, because it frequently ignored citizenship.[31]

The second period of increased migration is known as the Bracero Era from 1942 to 1964, referring to the Bracero program implemented by the United States, contracting agricultural labor from Mexico due to labor shortages from the World War II draft. An estimated 4.6 million Mexican immigrants were pulled into the United States through the Bracero Program from the 1940s to the 1960s.[61] The lack of agricultural laborers due to increases in military drafts for World War II opened up a chronic need for low wage workers to fill jobs.

Late 20th century

 
Mariachi bands, who are available for hire, wait at the Mariachi Plaza in Los Angeles.

While Mexican Americans are concentrated in the Southwest: California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, during World War I many moved to industrial communities such as St. Louis, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and other steel-producing regions, where they gained industrial jobs. Like European immigrants, they were attracted to work that did not require proficiency in English. Industrial restructuring in the second half of the century put many Mexican Americans out of work in addition to people of other ethnic groups. Their industrial skills were not as useful in the changing economies of these areas.[62]

The Delano grape strike was influenced by the Filipino-American farm worker strike in Coachella Valley, May 1965. In which Migrant Filipino-American workers asked for a $0.15/hour raise.[63]

The 1965 Delano grape strike, sparked by mostly Filipino American farmworkers, became an intersectional struggle when labor leaders and voting rights and civil rights activists Dolores Huerta, founder of the National Farm Workers Association and her co-leader César Chávez united with the strikers to form the United Farm Workers. Huerta's slogan "Sí, se puede" (Spanish for "Yes we can"), was popularized by Chávez's fast and became a rallying cry for the Chicano Movement or Mexican American civil rights movement. The Chicano movement aimed for a variety of civil rights reforms and was inspired by the civil rights movement; demands ranged from the restoration of land grants to farm workers' rights, to enhanced education, to voting and political rights, as well as emerging awareness of collective history. The Chicano walkouts of antiwar students is traditionally seen as the start of the more radical phase of the Chicano movement.[64][65]

Since there weren't many job opportunities in their country, Mexicans moved to the United States to help them receive a job. However, when they came to the United States their wages were extremely low.[16]

 
Trend of Mexican migration to the United States. Here the term immigrant refers to those who were not born in the United States but are now currently residing in the United States. This can include naturalized US citizens, legal permanent residents, employees and students on visas, and the undocumented.[59]

During this period, civil rights groups such as the National Mexican-American Anti-Defamation Committee were founded. By the early 21st century, the states with the largest percentages and populations of Mexican Americans are California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Colorado, Nevada and Utah. There have also been markedly increasing populations in Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and Illinois.[66]

In terms of religion, Mexican Americans are primarily Roman Catholic.[67] A large minority are Evangelical Protestants. Notably, according to a Pew Hispanic Center report in 2006 and the Pew Religious Landscape Survey in 2008, Mexican Americans are significantly less likely than other Latino groups to abandon Catholicism for Protestant churches.[68][69]

In 2008, "Yes We Can" (in Spanish: "Sí, se puede") was adopted as the 2008 campaign slogan of Barack Obama, whose election and reelection as the first African American president underlined the growing importance of the Mexican American vote.[45] The failure of both parties' presidents to properly enact immigration reform in the United States led to an increased polarization of how to handle an increasingly diverse population as Mexican Americans spread out from traditional centers in the Southwest and Chicago. Most Mexican Roma came to the United States from Argentina.[70] In 2015, the United States admitted 157,227 Mexican immigrants,[71] and as of November 2016, 1.31 million Mexicans were on the waiting list to immigrate to the United States through legal means.[72] A 2014 survey showed that 34% of Mexicans would immigrate to the United States if given the opportunity, with 17% saying they would do it illegally.[73]

Race and ethnicity

Ethnically, Mexican Americans are a diverse population made up primarily of European ancestry and Indigenous ancestry and usually a mix of both (mestizo), but also on a smaller scale African, East Asian, Middle Eastern descent (mainly Lebanese). The majority of the Mexican population identifies as mestizo. In colonial times, Mestizo was meant to be a person of mixed heritage, particularly European and Native American. Nonetheless, the meaning of the word has changed through time, currently being used to refer to the segment of the Mexican population who is of at least partial Indigenous ancestry, but does not speak Indigenous languages.[74] Thus in Mexico, the term "Mestizo", while still mostly applying to people who are of mixed European and Indigenous descent, to various degrees, the term has become more of a cultural label rather than a racial one. It is vaguely defined and includes people who do not have Indigenous ancestry, people who do not have European ancestry as well as people of mixed, and sometimes predominant African ancestry.[75] Such transformation of the word is not a casualty but the result of a concept known as "mestizaje", which was promoted by the post-revolutionary Mexican government in an effort to create a united Mexican ethno-cultural identity with no racial distinctions.[76] It is because of this that sometimes the Mestizo population in Mexico is estimated to be as high as 93% of the Mexican population.[77]

Per the 2010 US Census, the majority (52.8%) of Mexican Americans identified as being white.[78] The remainder identified themselves as being of "some other race" (39.5%), "two or more races" (5.0%), Native American (1.4%), black (0.9%) and Asian / Pacific Islander (0.4%).[78] It is notable that only 5% of Mexican Americans reported being of two or more races despite the presumption of mestizaje among the Mexican population in Mexico.

2010 US Census[78]
Self-identified Race Percent of population
White alone
52.8%
Black
0.9%
Asian
0.4%
American Indians and Alaska Natives
1.4%
Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders
0.2%
Two or more races
5.0%
Some Other Race
39.5%
Total
100%

This identification as "some other race" reflects activism among Mexican Americans as claiming a cultural status and working for their rights in the United States, as well as the separation due to different language and culture. Latinos are not a racial classification, however, but an ethnic group.

Genetic studies made in the Mexican population have found European ancestry ranging from 56%[79] going to 60%,[80] 64%[81] and up to 78%.[82] In general, Mexicans have both European and Amerindian ancestries, and the proportion varies by region and individuals. African ancestry is also present, but in lower proportion. There is genetic asymmetry, with the direct paternal line predominately European and the maternal line predominately Amerindian. Younger Mexican Americans tend to have more Indigenous ancestry; in those studied born between the 1940s and 1990s, there was an average increase in ancestry of 0.4% per year. Though there is no simple explanation, it is possibly some combination of assortative mating, changes in migration patterns over time (with more recent immigrants having higher levels of Indigenous ancestry), population growth and other unexamined factors.[83]

For instance, a 2006 study conducted by Mexico's National Institute of Genomic Medicine (INMEGEN), which genotyped 104 samples, reported that Mestizo Mexicans are 58.96% European, 35.05% "Asian" (primarily Amerindian), and 5.03% Other.[84] According to a 2009 report by the Mexican Genome Project, which sampled 300 Mestizos from six Mexican states and one Indigenous group, the gene pool of the Mexican mestizo population was calculated to be 55.2% percent Indigenous, 41.8% European, 1.0% African, and 1.2% Asian.[77] A 2012 study published by the Journal of Human Genetics found the deep paternal ancestry of the Mexican Mestizo population to be predominately European (64.9%) followed by Amerindian (30.8%) and Asian (1.2%).[85] An autosomal ancestry study performed on Mexico City reported that the European ancestry of Mexicans was 52% with the rest being Amerindian and a small African contribution, additionally maternal ancestry was analyzed, with 47% being of European origin. Unlike previous studies which only included Mexicans who self-identified as Mestizos, the only criteria for sample selection in this study was that the volunteers self-identified as Mexicans.[86]

While Mexico does not have comprehensive modern racial censuses, some international publications believe that Mexican people of predominately European descent (Spanish or other European) make up approximately one-sixth (16.5%), this based on the figures of the last racial census in the country, made in 1921.[87] According to an opinion poll conducted by the Latinobarómetro organization in 2011, 52% of Mexican respondents said they were mestizos, 19% Indigenous, 6% white, 2% mulattos and 3% "other race."[88]

US census bureau classifications

As the United States' borders expanded, the United States Census Bureau changed its racial classification methods for Mexican Americans under United States jurisdiction. The Bureau's classification system has evolved significantly from its inception:

  • From 1790 to 1850, there was no distinct racial classification of Mexican Americans in the US census. The categories recognized by the Census Bureau were White, Free People of Color, and Black. The Census Bureau estimates that during this period the number of persons who could not be categorized as white or black did not exceed 0.25% of the total population based on 1860 census data.[89]
  • From 1850 through 1920, the Census Bureau expanded its racial categories to include multi-racial persons, under Mestizos, Mulattos, as well as new categories of distinction of Amerindians and Asians. It classified Mexicans and Mexican Americans as "white".[89]
  • The 1930 US census added a separate category for "color" or "race" which declassified Mexicans as white. Census workers were instructed to write "W" for white and "Mex" for Mexican." Other categories were "Neg" for Negro; "In" for Amerindian; "Ch" for Chinese; "Jp" for Japanese; "Fil" for Filipino; "Hin" for Hindu; and "Kor" for Korean.[90]
  • In the 1940 census, due to widespread protests by the Mexican American community following the 1930 changes, Mexican Americans were re-classified as White. Instructions for enumerators were: "Mexicans – Report 'White' (W) for Mexicans unless they are definitely of Indigenous or other non-white race." During the same census, however, the bureau began to track the White population of Spanish mother tongue. This practice continued through the 1960 census.[89] The 1960 census also used the title "Spanish-surnamed American" in their reporting data of Mexican Americans; this category also covered Cuban Americans, Puerto Ricans and others under the same category.
  • From 1970 to 1980, there was a dramatic increase in the number of people who identified as "of Other Race" in the census, reflecting the addition of a question on 'Latino origin' to the 100-percent questionnaire, an increased propensity for Latinos to identify as other than White as they agitated for civil rights, and a change in editing procedures to accept reports of "Other race" for respondents who wrote in ethnic Latino entries, such as Mexican, Cuban, or Puerto Rican. In 1970, such responses in the Other race category were reclassified and tabulated as white. During this census, the bureau attempted to identify all Latinos by use of the following criteria in sampled sets:[89]
    • Spanish speakers and persons belonging to a household where the head of household was a Spanish speaker
    • persons with Spanish heritage by birth location or surname
    • Persons who self-identified Spanish origin or descent
  • From 1980 on, the Census Bureau has collected data on Latino origin on a 100-percent basis. The bureau has noted in 2002 that an increasing number of respondents identify as of Latino origin but not of the White race.[89]

For certain purposes, respondents who wrote in "Chicano" or "Mexican" (or indeed, almost all Latino origin groups) in the "Some other race" category were automatically re-classified into the "White race" group.[91]

Politics and debate of racial classification

 
Romualdo Pacheco, a Californio statesman and first Mexican to serve in the US House of Representatives (1877)
 
Octaviano Larrazolo became the first Mexican American to serve in the US Senate (1928)
 

In some cases, legal classification of White racial status has made it difficult for Mexican-American rights activists to prove minority discrimination. In the case Hernandez v. Texas (1954), civil rights lawyers for the appellant, named Pedro Hernandez, were confronted with a paradox: because Mexican Americans were classified as White by the federal government and not as a separate race in the census, lower courts held that they were not being denied equal protection by being tried by juries that excluded Mexican Americans by practice. The lower court ruled there was no violation of the Fourteenth Amendment by excluding people with Mexican ancestry among the juries. Attorneys for the state of Texas and judges in the state courts contended that the amendment referred only to racial, not "nationality," groups. Thus, since Mexican Americans were tried by juries composed of their racial group—whites—their constitutional rights were not violated. The US Supreme Court ruling in Hernandez v. Texas case held that "nationality" groups could be protected under the Fourteenth Amendment, and it became a landmark in the civil rights history of the United States.[92][93]

While Mexican Americans served in all-White units during World War II, many Mexican–American veterans continued to face discrimination when they arrived home; they created the G.I. Forum to work for equal treatment.[94]

In times and places in the United States where Mexicans were classified as White, they were permitted by law to intermarry with what today are termed "non-Latino whites." Social customs typically approved of such marriages only if the Mexican partner was not of visible Indigenous ancestry.[95]

In the late 1960s the founding of the Crusade for Justice in Denver and the land grant movement in New Mexico in 1967 set the bases for what would become known as Chicano (Mexican American) nationalism. The 1968 Los Angeles, California school walkouts expressed Mexican-American demands to end de facto ethnic segregation (also based on residential patterns), increase graduation rates, and reinstate a teacher fired for supporting student political organizing. A notable event in the Chicano movement was the 1972 Convention of La Raza Unida (United People) Party, which organized with the goal of creating a third party to give Chicanos political power in the United States.[94]

In the past, Mexicans were legally considered "White" because either they were accepted as being of Spanish ancestry, or because of early treaty obligations to Spaniards and Mexicans that conferred citizenship status to Mexican peoples before the American Civil War. Numerous slave states bordered Mexican territory at a time when 'whiteness' was nearly a prerequisite for US citizenship in those states.[96][97]

Although Mexican Americans were legally classified as "white" in terms of official federal policy, socially they were seen as "too Indian" to be treated as such.[26] Many organizations, businesses, and homeowners associations and local legal systems had official policies in the early 20th century to exclude Mexican Americans in a racially discriminatory way.[98] Throughout the Southwest, discrimination in wages was institutionalized in "White wages" versus lower "Mexican wages" for the same job classifications.[98] For Mexican Americans, opportunities for employment were largely limited to guest worker programs.[98]

The bracero program, begun in 1942 during World War II, when many United States men were drafted for war, allowed Mexicans temporary entry into the United States as migrant workers at farms throughout California and the Southwest. This program continued until 1964.[84][99][100]

A number of western states passed anti-miscegenation laws, directed chiefly at Chinese and Japanese. As Mexican Americans were then classified as "White" by the census, they could not legally marry African or Asian Americans (See Perez v. Sharp).[101] According to historian Neil Foley in his book The White Scourge: Mexicans, Blacks, and Poor Whites in Texas Cotton Culture, Mexicans and Mexican-Americans in Texas did marry non-Whites, typically without reprisal.[102]

While of racial segregation and discrimination against both Mexican American and African American minorities were subject to segregation and racial discrimination, they were treated differently. There were legal racial demarcations between Whites and blacks in a state like Texas, whereas the line between Whites and Mexican Americans was not legally defined. Mexican Americans could attend White schools and colleges (which were racially segregated against blacks), mix socially with Whites and, marry Whites. These choices were prohibited to African Americans under state laws. Racial segregation operated separately from economic class and was rarely as rigid for Mexican Americans as it was for African Americans. For instance, even when some African Americans in Texas enjoyed higher economic status than Mexican Americans (or Whites) in an area, they were still segregated by law.[103][page needed]

Demographics

 
Janet Murguía is president of UnidosUS, the United States' largest Latino nonprofit advocacy organization.

Mexican-born population over time

Year Population[13] Percentage of all
US immigrants
1850 13,300 0.6
1860 27,500 0.7
1870 42,400 0.8
1880 68,400 1.0
1890 77,900 0.8
1900 103,400 1.0
1910 221,900 1.6
1920 486,400 3.5
1930 641,500 4.5
1940 357,800 3.1
1950 451,400 3.9
1960 575,900 5.9
1970 759,700 7.9
1980 2,199,200 15.6
1990 4,298,000 21.7
2000 9,177,500 29.5
2010 11,711,100 29.3
2019 10,931,900 24.3

Culture

Food and drink

Mexican Americans have influenced American cuisine, burritos, enchiladas, guacamole, nachos, tacos, tamales, and tortillas, are regular in American vernacular.[104] The cuisines of New Mexican and Tex-Mex are native to the cuisine of the Southwestern United States, and Mexican cuisine has influenced Californian cuisine.[105]

Music

The popular radio format Regional Mexican includes Mexican styles of music; Norteño, ranchera, Conjunto, Son Jarocho, and mariachi.[106] It also includes the indigenous and Mexican American music styles of the New Mexico music, Tejano music, Chicano rock, and Chicano rap, which originate in the United States.

Economic and social issues

Immigration issues

See also Strangers No Longer: Together on the Journey of Hope, a pastoral letter written by both the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and the Mexican Episcopal Conference, which deals with the issue of migration in the context of the United States and Mexico.
 
Cesar Chavez's supporters say his work led to numerous improvements for union laborers. Although the UFW faltered a few years after Chavez died in 1993, he became an iconic "folk saint" in the pantheon of Mexican Americans.

Since the 1960s, Mexican immigrants have met a significant portion of the demand for cheap labor in the United States.[107] Fear of deportation makes them highly vulnerable to exploitation by employers. Many employers, however, have developed a "don't ask, don't tell" attitude toward hiring undocumented Mexican nationals. In May 2006, hundreds of thousands of undocumented immigrants, Mexicans and other nationalities, walked out of their jobs across the country in protest to support immigration reform (many in hopes of a path to citizenship similar to the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 signed into law by President Ronald Reagan, which granted citizenship to Mexican nationals living and working without documentation in the US). Governmentalities have been the result of unequal relations with its northern neighbors versus a response to more locally driven needs.[108]

US politicians cited numbers as high as 20 million undocumented immigrants in the United States without providing statistical proof.[16]

 
A rally on May Day 2006 in Chicago. The protests began in response to proposed legislation known as H.R. 4437, which would raise penalties for illegal immigration and classify undocumented immigrants and anyone who helped them enter or remain in the US as felons.

Even legal immigrants to the United States, both from Mexico and elsewhere, have spoken out against illegal immigration. However, according to a survey conducted by the Pew Research Center in June 2007, 63% of Americans would support an immigration policy that would put undocumented immigrants on a path to citizenship if they "pass background checks, pay fines and have jobs, learn English", while 30% would oppose such a plan. The survey also found that if this program was instead labeled "amnesty", 54% would support it, while 39% would oppose.[109]

Alan Greenspan, former Chairman of the Federal Reserve, has said that the growth of the working-age population is a large factor in keeping the economy growing and that immigration can be used to grow that population. According to Greenspan, by 2030, the growth of the US workforce will slow from 1 percent to 1/2 percent, while the percentage of the population over 65 years will rise from 13 percent to perhaps 20 percent.[110] Greenspan has also stated that the current immigration problem could be solved with a "stroke of the pen", referring to the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2007 which would have strengthened border security, created a guest worker program, and put undocumented immigrants currently residing in the US on a path to citizenship if they met certain conditions.[111]

Discrimination and stereotypes

 
Lowrider began in the Mexican-American barrios of Los Angeles in the mid-to-late 1940s and during the post-war prosperity of the 1950s. Initially, some youths would place sandbags in the trunk of their customized cars in order to create a lowered effect.

Throughout US history, Mexican Americans have endured various types of negative stereotypes which have long circulated in media and popular culture.[112][113] Mexican Americans have also faced discrimination based on ethnicity, race, culture, poverty, and use of the Spanish language.[114]

Mexicans faced racially segregated schooling in a number of Western states during the Depression era. In Wyoming, the segregation of Mexican children—regardless of US citizenship—mirrored the South's Jim Crow laws. The segregation of Mexicans also occurred in California and in neighboring Colorado, Montana, and Nebraska.[115][116]

Since the majority of undocumented immigrants in the US have traditionally been from Latin America, the Mexican American community has been the subject of widespread immigration raids. During The Great Depression, the United States government sponsored a Mexican Repatriation program which was intended to encourage people to voluntarily move to Mexico, but thousands were deported against their will. During the 1930s, between 355 000 and 1 million individuals were repatriated or deported to Mexico, approximately 40 to 60 percent of which were actually United States citizens - overwhelmingly children. Voluntary repatriation was far more common than formal deportation.[34][33][117][118] In the post-war era, the Justice Department launched Operation Wetback.[118]

 
Sign from a restaurant in Dallas, Texas, now located in the National Civil Rights Museum

During World War II, more than 300,000 Mexican Americans served in the US armed forces.[56] Mexican Americans were generally integrated into regular military units; however, many Mexican–American War veterans were discriminated against and even denied medical services by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs when they arrived home.[84] In 1948, war veteran Hector P. Garcia founded the American GI Forum to address the concerns of Mexican American veterans who were being discriminated against. The AGIF's first campaign was on the behalf of Felix Longoria, a Mexican American private who was killed in the Philippines while in the line of duty. Upon the return of his body to his hometown of Three Rivers, Texas, he was denied funeral services because of his nationality.

 
Food truck Mi Lindo Huetamo #2, in Houston, Texas

In the 1948 case of Perez v. Sharp, the Supreme Court of California recognized that the ban on interracial marriage violated the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution from 1868. The case involved Andrea Perez, a Mexican-American woman listed as White, and Sylvester Davis, an African American man.[119]

In 2006, Time magazine reported that the number of hate groups in the United States increased by 33% since 2000, with illegal immigration being used as a foundation for recruitment.[120] According to the 2011 Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Hate Crimes Statistics Report, 56.9% of the 939 victims of crimes motivated by a bias toward the victims’ ethnicity or national origin were directed at Latinos.[121] In California, the state with the largest Mexican American population, the number of hate crimes committed against Latinos almost doubled from 2003 to 2007.[122][123] In 2011, hate crimes against Latinos declined 31% in the United States and 43% in California.[124] The 2019 El Paso shooting which resulted in 23 deaths, was a result of the gunman's racist attitude towards Mexican Americans and Latino immigrants in general.

Social status and assimilation

There have been increases in average personal and household incomes for Mexican Americans in the 21st century. US-born Americans of Mexican heritage earn more and are represented more in the middle and upper-class segments more than most recently arriving Mexican immigrants.

Most immigrants from Mexico, as elsewhere, come from the lower classes and from families generationally employed in lower skilled jobs. They also are most likely from rural areas. Thus, many new Mexican immigrants are not skilled in white collar professions. Recently, some professionals from Mexico have been migrating, but to make the transition from one country to another involves re-training and re-adjusting to conform to US laws —i.e. professional licensing is required.[125] Millions crossed into the United States to find work that would help them survive as well as sustain their families in Mexico.[126]

 
Mexican food has become part of the mainstream American market, just as Italian food did decades before and assimilated to the American market like Tex-Mex.

According to James P. Smith, the children and grandchildren of Latino immigrants tend to lessen educational and income gaps with White American. Immigrant Latino men earn about half of what whites make, while second generation US-born Latinos make about 78 percent of the salaries of their white counterparts and by the third generation US-born Latinos make on average identical wages to their US-born white counterparts.[127] However, the number of Mexican American professionals have been growing in size since 2010.[128]

Huntington (2005) argues that the sheer number, concentration, linguistic homogeneity, and other characteristics of Latin American immigrants will erode the dominance of English as a nationally unifying language, weaken the country's dominant cultural values, and promote ethnic allegiances over a primary identification as an American. Testing these hypotheses with data from the US Census and national and Los Angeles opinion surveys, Citrin et al. (2007) show that Latinos generally acquire English and lose Spanish rapidly beginning with the second generation, and appear to be no more or less religious or committed to the work ethic than native-born non-Mexican American whites. However, the children and grandchildren of Mexican immigrants were able to make close ties with their extended families in Mexico, since United States shares a 2,000 mile border with Mexico. Many had the opportunity to visit Mexico on a relatively frequent basis. As a result, many Mexicans were able to maintain a strong Mexican culture, language, and relationship with others.[129]

South et al. (2005) examine Latino spatial assimilation and inter-neighborhood geographic mobility. Their longitudinal analysis of seven hundred Mexican, Puerto Rican, and Cuban immigrants followed from 1990 to 1995 finds broad support for hypotheses derived from the classical account of assimilation into American society. High income, English-language use, and embeddedness in American social contexts increased Latin American immigrants' geographic mobility into multi-ethnic neighborhoods. US citizenship and years spent in the United States were positively associated with geographic mobility into different neighborhoods while co-ethnic contact and prior experiences of ethnic discrimination decreased the likelihood that Latino immigrants would move from their original neighborhoods and into non-Latino white census tracts.[130]

Intermarriage

 
Jessica Alba's mother has Danish, Welsh, German and French ancestry, while her paternal grandparents, who were born in California, were the children of Mexican immigrants.[131]

According to 2000 census data, US-born ethnic Mexicans have a high degree of intermarriage with non-Latino whites. Based on a sample size of 38,911 US-born Mexican husbands and 43,527 US-born Mexican wives:[132]

  • 50.6% of US-born Mexican men and 45.3% of US-born Mexican women were married to US-born Mexicans;[132]
  • 26.7% of US-born Mexican men and 28.1% of US-born Mexican women were married to non-Latino whites; and[132]
  • 13.6% of US-born Mexican men and 17.4% of US-born Mexican women were married to Mexico-born Mexicans.[132]

In addition, based on 2000 data, there is a significant amount of ethnic absorption of ethnic Mexicans into the mainstream population with 16% of the children of mixed marriages not being identified in the census as Mexican.[133]

A study done by the National Research Council (US) Panel on Latinos in the United States published in 2006 looked at not only marriages, but also non-marriage unions. It found that since at least 1980, marriage for females across all Latino ethnic groups, including Mexican Americans, has been in a steady decline.[134] In addition, the percentage of births to unmarried mothers increased for females of Mexican descent from 20.3% in 1980 to 40.8% in 2000, more than doubling in that time frame.[134] The study also found that for females of all Latino ethnicities, including Mexican origin, "considerably fewer births to unmarried Latino mothers involve partnerships with non-Latino white males than is the case for married Latino mothers. Second, births outside marriage are more likely to involve a non-Latino black father than births within marriage."[134] Additionally, "Unions among partners from different Latino origins or between Latinos and non-Latino blacks are considerably more evident in cohabitation and parenthood than they are in marriage. In particular, unions between Latinos and non-Latino blacks are prominent in parenthood, especially non-marital births."[134] Furthermore, for 29.7% of unmarried births to native-born females of Mexican origin and 40% of unmarried births to females of "Other Latino" origin, which may include Mexican American, information on the father's ethnicity was missing.[134] The study was supported by the US Census Bureau, amongst other sources.[134]

Segregation issues

Housing market practices

Studies have shown that the segregation among Mexican Americans and Mexican immigrants seems to be declining. One study from 1984 found that Mexican American applicants were offered the same housing terms and conditions as non-Latino white Americans. They were asked to provide the same information (regarding employment, income, credit checks, etc.) and asked to meet the same general qualifications of their non-Latino white peers.[135] In this same study, it was found that Mexican Americans were more likely than non-Latino white Americans to be asked to pay a security deposit or application fee[135] and Mexican American applicants were also more likely to be placed onto a waiting list than non-Latino white applicants.[135]

Battle of Chavez Ravine

 
View of downtown and the Palos Verdes Peninsula

The Battle of Chavez Ravine has several meanings, but often refers to controversy surrounding government acquisition of land largely owned by Mexican Americans in Los Angeles' Chavez Ravine over approximately ten years (1951–1961). The eventual result was the removal of the entire population of Chavez Ravine from land on which Dodger Stadium was later constructed.[136] The great majority of the Chavez Ravine land was acquired to make way for proposed public housing. The public housing plan that had been advanced as politically "progressive" and had resulted in the removal of the Mexican American landowners of Chavez Ravine, was abandoned after passage of a public referendum prohibiting the original housing proposal and election of a conservative Los Angeles mayor opposed to public housing. Years later, the land acquired by the government in Chavez Ravine was dedicated by the city of Los Angeles as the site of what is now Dodger Stadium.[136]

Latino segregation versus Black segregation

 
Viramontes' childhood neighborhood was divided by the East LA interchange in the early 1960s. The novel Their Dogs Came with Them focuses on the freeway construction and difficult conditions for the Mexican Americans living in this area at the time.

When comparing the contemporary segregation of Mexican Americans to that of Black Americans, some scholars claim that "Latino segregation is less severe and fundamentally different from Black residential segregation." suggesting that the segregation faced by Latinos is more likely to be due to factors such as lower socioeconomic status and immigration while the segregation of African Americans is more likely to be due to larger issues of the history of racism in the US.[137]

Legally, Mexican Americans could vote and hold elected office, however, it was not until the creation of organizations such as the League of United Latin America Citizens and the G.I. Forum that Mexican Americans began to achieve political influence. Edward Roybal's election to the Los Angeles City Council in 1949 and then to Congress in 1962 also represented this rising Mexican American political power.[138] In the late 1960s the founding of the Crusade for Justice in Denver in and the land grant movement in New Mexico in 1967 set the bases for what would become the Chicano (Mexican American) nationalism. The 1968 Los Angeles school walkouts expressed Mexican American demands to end segregation, increase graduation rates, and reinstate a teacher fired for supporting student organizing. A notable event in the Chicano movement was the 1972 Convention of La Raza Unida (United People) Party, which organized with the goal of creating a third party that would give Chicanos political power in the United States.[94]

 
Map of Los Angeles County showing percentage of population self-identified as Mexican in ancestry or national origin by census tracts. Heaviest concentrations are in East Los Angeles, Echo Park/Silver Lake, South Los Angeles and San Pedro/Wilmington.

In the past, Mexicans were legally considered "White" because either they were considered to be of full Spanish heritage, or because of early treaty obligations to Spaniards and Mexicans that conferred citizenship status to Mexican peoples at a time when whiteness was a prerequisite for US citizenship.[96][97] Although Mexican Americans were legally classified as "White" in terms of official federal policy, many organizations, businesses, and homeowners associations and local legal systems had official policies to exclude Mexican Americans. Throughout the southwest discrimination in wages were institutionalized in "white wages" versus lower "Mexican wages" for the same job classifications. For Mexican Americans, opportunities for employment were largely limited to guest worker programs. The bracero program, which began in 1942 and officially ended in 1964, allowed them temporary entry into the United States as migrant workers in farms throughout California and the Southwest.[84][98][99][100]

Mexican Americans legally classified as "White", following anti-miscegenation laws in most western states until the 1960s, could not legally marry African or Asian Americans (See Perez v. Sharp).[119] However, most were not socially considered white, and therefore, according to Historian Neil Foley in the book The White Scourge: Mexicans, Blacks, and Poor Whites in Texas Cotton Culture, Mexicans and Mexican-Americans did marry non-whites typically without reprisal.

Despite the similarities between Mexican American and African American patterns of segregation, there were important differences. The racial demarcations between whites and blacks in a state like Texas were inviolable, whereas those between whites and Mexican Americans were not. It was possible for Mexican Americans to attend white schools and colleges, mix socially with whites and marry whites: all of these things were impossible for African Americans, largely due to the legalized nature of black-white segregation. Racial segregation was rarely as rigid for Mexican Americans as it was for African Americans, even in situations where African Americans enjoyed higher economic status than Mexican Americans.[103]

Segregated schools

 
Mendez v. Westminster was a 1947 federal court case that challenged Mexican remedial schools in Orange County, California. In its ruling, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, in an en banc decision, held that the forced segregation of Mexican American students into separate "Mexican schools" was unconstitutional and unlawful because Mexicans were white. It was the first ruling in the United States in favor of desegregation.

During certain periods, Mexican American children sometimes were forced to register at "Mexican schools", where classroom conditions were poor, the school year was shorter, and the quality of education was substandard.[139]

Various reasons for the inferiority of the education given to Mexican American students have been listed by James A. Ferg-Cadima including: inadequate resources, poor equipment, unfit building construction. In 1923, the Texas Education Survey Commission found that the school year for some non-white groups was 1.6 months shorter than the average school year.[139] Some have interpreted the shortened school year as a "means of social control" implementing policies to ensure that Mexican Americans would maintain the unskilled labor force required for a strong economy. A lesser education would serve to confine Mexican Americans to the bottom rung of the social ladder. By limiting the number of days that Mexican Americans could attend school and allotting time for these same students to work, in mainly agricultural and seasonal jobs, the prospects for higher education and upward mobility were slim.[139]

Immigration and segregation

 
El Paso Morning Times newspaper January 30, 1917, headlinedː "Bill Before Legislature to Prevent Mexicans Voting" depicts the 1917 Bath Riots begun by Carmelita Torres at the Santa Fe International Bridge disinfecting plant at the El Paso, Texas and Juarez, Mexico border.

Immigration hubs are popular destinations for Latino immigrants. These segregated areas have historically served the purpose of allowing immigrants to become comfortable in the United States, accumulate wealth, and eventually leave.[140]

This model of immigration and residential segregation, explained above, is the model which has historically been accurate in describing the experiences of Latino immigrants. However, the patterns of immigration seen today no longer follows this model. This old model is termed the standard spatial assimilation model. More contemporary models are the polarization model and the diffusion model: The spatial assimilation model posits that as immigrants would live within this country's borders, they would simultaneously become more comfortable in their new surroundings, their socioeconomic status would rise, and their ability to speak English would increase. The combination of these changes would allow for the immigrant to move out of the barrio and into the dominant society. This type of assimilation reflects the experiences of immigrants of the early twentieth century.[137]

Polarization model suggests that the immigration of non-black minorities into the United States further separates blacks and whites, as though the new immigrants are a buffer between them. This creates a hierarchy in which blacks are at the bottom, whites are at the top, and other groups fill the middle. In other words, the polarization model posits that Asians and Latinos are less segregated than their African-American peers because white American society would rather live closer to Asians or Latinos than African-Americans.[140]

The diffusion model has also been suggested as a way of describing the immigrant's experience within the United States. This model is rooted in the belief that as time passes, more and more immigrants enter the country. This model suggests that as the United States becomes more populated with a more diverse set of peoples, stereotypes and discriminatory practices will decrease, as awareness and acceptance increase. The diffusion model predicts that new immigrants will break down old patterns of discrimination and prejudice, as one becomes more and more comfortable with the more diverse neighborhoods that are created through the influx of immigrants.[140] Applying this model to the experiences of Mexican Americans forces one to see Mexican American immigrants as positive additions to the "American melting pot," in which as more additions are made to the pot, the more equal and accepting society will become.

The Chicano movement and the Chicano Moratorium

 
A plaque honoring Ruben Salazar mounted in the Globe Lobby of the Los Angeles Times Building in downtown Los Angeles

The Chicano Moratorium, formally known as the National Chicano Moratorium Committee, was a movement of Chicano anti-war activists that built a broad-based but fragile coalition of Mexican-American groups to organize opposition to the Vietnam War. The committee was led by activists from local colleges and members of the "Brown Berets", a group with roots in the high school student movement that staged walkouts in 1968, known as the East L.A. walkouts, also called "blowouts".[141]

The best known historical fact of the Moratorium was the death of Rubén Salazar, known for his reporting on civil rights and police brutality. The official story is that Salazar was killed by a tear gas canister fired by a member of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department into the Silver Dollar Café at the conclusion of the National Chicano Moratorium March.[142]

Education

Parental Involvement

 
Sal Castro was a Mexican-American educator and activist. He was most well known for his role in the 1968 East L.A. walkouts. See Walkout (film).

Parents are commonly associated with being a child's first teacher. As the child grows older, the parent's role in their child's learning may change; however, a parent will often continue to serve as a role model. There are multiple research articles that have looked at parental involvement and education. A key aspect of parental involvement in education is that it can be transmitted in many ways. For a long time, there has been a misconception that the parents of Mexican American students are not involved in their children's education; however, multiple studies have demonstrated that parents are involved in their children's education (Valencia & Black, 2002).[143] It is important to know that the parents of Mexican American students frequently display their involvement through untraditional methods; such as, consejos, home-base practices, and high academic expectations.

 
Lauro Cavazos, Secretary of Education from August 1988 to December 1990

Literature has demonstrated that parental involvement has had a positive influence in the academic achievement of Mexican American students. Studies have shown that Mexican families show their value towards education by using untraditional methods (Kiyama, 2011).[144] One educational practice that is commonly used among Mexican families are consejos (advice). Additional research has supported the idea that parents’ consejos have had a significant influence on the education of Mexican American students. Espino (2016)[145] studied the influence that parental involvement had on seven, 1st generation Mexican American PhDs. The study found that one of the participant's father would frequently use consejos to encourage his son to continue his education. The father's consejos served as an encouragement tool, which motivated the participant to continue his education. Consejos are commonly associated with the parents’ occupation. Parents use their occupation as leverage to encourage their child to continue his or her education, or else they may end up working an undesirable job (Espino, 2016). While this might not be the most common form of parental involvement, studies have shown that it has been an effective tool that encourages Mexican American students. Although that might be an effective tool for Mexican American students, a mother can be just as an important figure for consejos. A mother's role teaches their child the importance of everyday tasks such as knowing how to cook, clean and care for oneself in order to be independent and also to help out around the house. The children of single mothers have a huge impact on their children in pushing them to be successful in school in order to have a better life than what they provided to their children. Most single mothers live in poverty and are dependent of the government, so they want the best for their children so they are always encouraging their children to be focused and do their best.

 
Protesters are seen in June 2011 in support of the Tucson Unified School District's Mexican-American studies program. A new state law HB2281 effectively ended the program, saying it was divisive.

Another study emphasized the importance of home-based parental involvement. Altschul (2011)[146] conducted a study that tested the effects of six different types of parental involvement and their effect on Mexican American students. The study used previous data from the National Education Longitudinal Study (NELS) of 1988. The data was used to evaluate the influence of parental practices in the 8th grade and their effect on students once they were in the 10th grade. Altschul (2011) noted that home-based parental involvement had a more positive effect on the academic achievement of Mexican American students, than involvement in school organizations. The literature suggests that parental involvement in the school setting is not necessary, parents can impact the academic achievement of their children from their home.

Additional literature has demonstrated that parent involvement also comes in the form of parent expectations. Valencia and Black (2002) argued that Mexican parents place a significant amount of value on education and hold high expectations for their children. The purpose of their study was to debunk the notion that Mexicans do not value education by providing evidence that shows the opposite. Setting high expectations and expressing their desire for their children to be academically successful has served as powerful tools to increase of the academic achievement among Mexican American students (Valencia & Black, 2002). Keith and Lichtman (1995)[147] also conducted a research study that measured the influence of parental involvement and academic achievement. The data was collected from the NELS and used a total of 1,714 students that identified as Mexican American (Chicana/o). The study found a higher level of academic achievement among 8th grade Mexican American students and parents who had high educational aspirations for their children (Keith & Lichtman, 1995).

 
Mexican American family eating a meal

Additional research done by Carranza, You, Chhuon, and Hudley (2009)[148] added support to the idea that high parental expectations were associated with higher achievement levels among Mexican American students. Carranza et al. (2009) studied 298 Mexican American high school students. They studied whether perceived parental involvement, acculturation, and self-esteem had any effect on academic achievement and aspirations. Results from their study demonstrated that perceived parental involvement had an influence on the students’ academic achievement and aspirations. Additionally, Carranza et al. noted that among females, those who perceived that their parents expected them to get good grades tended to study more and have higher academic aspirations (2009). The findings suggest that parental expectations can affect the academic performance of Mexican American students.

Based on current literature, one can conclude that parental involvement is an extremely important aspect of Mexican American students’ education. The studies demonstrated that parental involvement is not limited to participating in school activities at the school; instead, parental involvement can be displayed through various forms. There are numerous studies that suggest that parental expectations are associated with the achievement level of Mexican American students. Future research should continue to study the reasons why Mexican American students perform better when their parents expect them to do well in school. Furthermore, future research can also look into whether gender influences parental expectations.

Stand and Deliver was an inductee of the 2011 National Film Registry list.[149][150] The National Film Board said that it was "one of the most popular of a new wave of narrative feature films produced in the 1980s by Latino filmmakers" and that it "celebrates in a direct, approachable, and impactful way, values of self-betterment through hard work and power through knowledge."[150]

Mexican American communities

 
Oasis Drive Inn with mural of a scarlet macaw on US Highway 83 in Crystal City, Texas
 
City Terrace streets
 
Two Mexican American boys at a Día de Los Muertos celebration in Greeley, Colorado
 
Los Angeles attracts Mexican American immigrants because of its rich Spanish and Mexican architecture, history and culture.

Large Mexican American populations by both size and per capita exist in the following American cities:

California

Arizona

  • Phoenix – Fifth-largest Mexican-American population.
  • Tucson – 30% of the almost 1 million people in the metro area.[163]

Texas

Illinois

  • Illinois - As of 2021, the state has 1.76 million people of full or partial Mexican ancestry (13.9% of the state population)[166]
  • Chicago metropolitan area – As of 2021, nearly 1.69 million people of full or partial Mexican ancestry (17.8% of the metro population) live in the Chicago metropolitan area[167] (which includes Racine and Kenosha counties in Wisconsin and Lake and Porter counties in Indiana).
  • Cook County - As of 2021, 1,032,984 people of full or partial Mexican ancestry live in Cook County (20.0% of the county population), the largest county in the state by population.[168]
  • Chicago - As of 2021, 571,577 people of full or partial Mexican ancestry live in Chicago proper (21.2% of the city population).[169]

Colorado

  • Denver – Colorado has the eighth largest population of Latinos, seventh highest percentage of Latinos, fourth largest population of Mexican-Americans, and sixth highest percentage of Mexican-Americans in the United States. According to the 2010 census, there are over 1 million Mexican-Americans in Colorado.[170] Over one-third of the city's population is Mexican-American or Latino, as well as approximately one-fourth of the entire Denver Metropolitan area. About 17% of the cities population is foreign born, mostly from Latin America.
  • Greeley – Over one-third of the city's population is Latino, mostly Mexican-American.
    • Garden City is Latino majority and Evans has a very large Latino population as well.
  • Southern Colorado is home to many communities of Latinos descended from Mexican settlers who arrived during Spanish colonial times. Roughly half of Pueblo's population is Latino, mostly Mexican-American. Many other towns in southern Colorado have high proportions of Mexican-Americans. La Junta, Rocky Ford, Las Animas, Lamar, Walsenburg and Trinidad all have large Mexican American communities.

Other states

  • Las Vegas, Nevada - 70% of Latinos that are eligible to vote in Nevada are Mexican [172]
  • The Yakima Valley and Tri-Cities, Washington – This region of Washington contains many communities of Mexican-American majority thanks to high demand for agricultural labor.
  • New York City – Mexicans are the third largest Latino ethnic group after Puerto Ricans and Dominicans. New York City's Mexican population ranked 11th among major American cities in 2000 at 186,872.[175]
  • Atlanta – Atlanta has a sizable Mexican population. Mexicans are the largest Latino ethnic group in Atlanta.[176] Mexicans are concentrated in Gwinnett County.[177]
  • New Orleans – Mexicans are one of the largest Latino groups in New Orleans following Hondurans.[178]
  • Kansas – There is a large Mexican American presence in Kansas.[179]
  • Detroit – In the early 1900s, many Mexican American families moved to Michigan and Detroit. There is a Mexican American community in Mexicantown.[180]
  • New Jersey The North Jersey region (nicknamed "Puebla Jersey" by migrants) is home to Mexican migrants and their descendants primarily from the states of Puebla and Oaxaca. The largest Mexican community is found in the small city of Passaic, where roughly a quarter of the city's population is of Mexican origin, where Mexicans began to arrive in the 1970s to work in mills. [181] [182]
  • Bridgeport and New Haven, Connecticut have the 1st and 3rd largest Mexican populations in the New England region respectively in 2020 (alongside Boston at #2), despite being much smaller cities. The Mexican population of these respective cities began to grow in the 1990s from the tens into the hundreds, to around 8,000 each by 2020. New Haven has thousands of migrants from Tlaxcala (some of whom are reported Nahuatl speakers),[183] where New Haven is the primary destination for migrants. Mexicans are the second largest Latino group in both cities, but in both they are heavily outnumbered by Puerto Ricans (Bridgeport has the 7th largest Puerto Rican community in the US), there they outnumber Mexicans roughly 4:1 there. Mexicans are the largest groups in the West End and North Hollow census tracks of Bridgeport, while in New Haven they are the largest national origin group in East Fair Haven. [184] [185][186]

Other US destinations

 
Original Ninfa's on Navigation Boulevard, established by Ninfa Laurenzo

Major cities like Boise, Idaho; Detroit, Michigan; Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Portland, Oregon; Salt Lake City, Utah; and Seattle, Washington have a large Mexican-American population.[187]

US states by Mexican American population

State/Territory Mexican
American
Population
(2018)[188]
Percentage
  Alabama 124,210 2.6
  Alaska 28,049 3.8
  Arizona 1,926,274 27.8
  Arkansas 159,273 5.4
  California 12,621,844 32.3
  Colorado 869,149 15.8
  Connecticut 57,383 1.6
  Delaware 34,244 3.7
  District of Columbia 14,146 1.6
  Florida 713,518 3.5
  Georgia 561,710 5.5
  Hawaii 45,832 3.3
  Idaho 181,185 10.8
  Illinois 1,715,831 13.4
  Indiana 333,219 5.1
  Iowa 143,368 4.6
  Kansas 278,213 9.6
  Kentucky 89,217 2.1
  Louisiana 93,750 2.1
  Maine 6,251 0.5
  Maryland 97,231 1.7
  Massachusetts 47,911 0.7
  Michigan 363,421 4.9
  Minnesota 201,580 3.7
  Mississippi 56,282 1.9
  Missouri 172,055 2.9
  Montana 27,510 2.7
  Nebraska 150,424 7.9
  Nevada 629,469 21.6
  New Hampshire 8,686 0.7
  New Jersey 230,875 2.6
  New Mexico 658,516 31.5
  New York 477,194 2.5
  North Carolina 538,505 5.3
  North Dakota 17,915 2.3
  Ohio 200,060 1.8
  Oklahoma 333,166 8.5
  Oregon 431,169 10.6
  Pennsylvania 152,537 1.2
  Rhode Island 11,123 1.1
  South Carolina 150,582 3.1
  South Dakota 21,229 2.5
  Tennessee 217,557 3.3
  Texas 9,394,506 33.7
  Utah 306,375 10.7
  Vermont 3,335 0.6
  Virginia 173,046 2.1
  Washington 728,208 10.0
  West Virginia 10,982 0.6
  Wisconsin 278,789 4.9
  Wyoming 44,704 7.7
Total US 36,600,000 12.2

Cities (metro areas) with the largest Mexican populations

  1. Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, CA Metro Area
  2. Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, IL-IN-WI Metro Area
  3. Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington. TX Metro Area
  4. Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, TX Metro Area
  5. Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA Metro Area
  6. Phoenix-Mesa-Chandler, AZ Metro Area
  7. San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad, CA Metro Area
  8. New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ-PA Metro Area
  9. San Francisco-Oakland-Berkeley, CA Metro Area
  10. McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, TX Metro Area

[189]

Health

Diabetes

Diabetes refers to a disease in which the body has an inefficiency of properly responding to insulin, which then affects the levels of glucose. The prevalence of diabetes in the United States is constantly rising. Common types of Diabetes are type 1 and type 2. Type 2 is the more common type of diabetes among Mexican Americans, and is constantly increasing due to poor diet habits.[190] The increase of obesity results in an increase of type 2 diabetes among Mexican Americans in the United States. Mexican American men have higher prevalence rates in comparison to non-Latinos, whites and blacks.[191] “The prevalence of diabetes increased from 8.9% in 1976–1980 to 12.3% in 1988–94 among adults aged 40 to 74” according to the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1988–1994.[191] In a 2014 study, The US Census Bureau estimates that by 2050, one in three people living in the United States will be of Latino origin including Mexican Americans.[192] Type 2 diabetes prevalence is rising due to many risk factors and there are still many cases of pre-diabetes and undiagnosed diabetes due to lack of sources. According to the US Department of Health and Human Services (2011), individuals of Mexican descent are 50% more likely to die from diabetes than their white counterparts.[191]

Notable people

See also

Ethnic:

Political:

Cultural:

Film:

References

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Bibliography/further reading

  • Englekirk, Allan, and Marguerite Marín. "Mexican Americans." Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 3, Gale, 2014), pp. 195–217. online
  • Gomez, Laura. Manifest Destinies: The Making of the Mexican American Race (New York UP, 2007). ISBN 978-0-8147-3174-1
  • Gómez-Quiñones, Juan, and Irene Vásquez. Making Aztlán: Ideology and Culture of the Chicana and Chicano Movement, 1966-1977 (2014)
  • Meier, Matt S., and Margo Gutiérrez. Encyclopedia of the Mexican American civil rights movement (Greenwood 2000) online
  • Quiroz, Anthony (ed.), Leaders of the Mexican American Generation: Biographical Essays. Boulder, CO: University Press of Colorado, 2015.
  • Orozco, Cynthia E. No Mexicans, women, or dogs allowed: The rise of the Mexican American civil rights movement (University of Texas Press, 2010) online
  • Rosales, F. Arturo. Chicano! The history of the Mexican American civil rights movement (Arte Público Press, 1997); online
  • Sánchez, George I (2006). "Ideology, and Whiteness in the Making of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement, 1930–1960". Journal of Southern History. 72 (3): 569–604. doi:10.2307/27649149. JSTOR 27649149.

External links

  • - University of California Santa Barbara
  • - University of California Santa Barbara
  • Calisphere > California Cultures > Hispanic Americans - University of California System
  • ImaginArte – Interpreting and Re-imaging Chican@Art - University of California Santa Barbara
  • Mexican American News – Network of the Mexican American Community
  • Mexican Americans MSN Encarta ( 2009-11-01)
  • Think Mexican – News, Culture, and Information on the Mexican Community

mexican, americans, spanish, mexicano, estadounidenses, mexico, americanos, estadounidenses, origen, mexicano, americans, full, partial, mexican, heritage, 2019, comprised, population, hispanic, latino, americans, 2019, were, born, united, states, though, they. Mexican Americans Spanish mexicano estadounidenses mexico americanos or estadounidenses de origen mexicano are Americans of full or partial Mexican heritage 11 In 2019 Mexican Americans comprised 11 3 of the US population and 61 5 of all Hispanic and Latino Americans 12 In 2019 71 of Mexican Americans were born in the United States 12 though they make up 53 of the total population of foreign born Latino Americans and 25 of the total foreign born population 13 The United States is home to the second largest Mexican community in the world 24 of the entire Mexican origin population of the world behind only Mexico 14 Most Mexican Americans reside in the Southwest over 60 in the states of California and Texas 15 16 17 18 19 20 Mexican Americansmexicanos estadounidenses Spanish Percent of population of Mexican descent in 2010 1 Total population10 697 374 by birth 2021 2 37 235 886 by ancestry 2021 3 11 2 of total US population 2021 3 Regions with significant populationsCalifornia Los AngelesBay AreaSan DiegoInland EmpireCentral Valley Texas HoustonDFWSan AntonioRio Grande Valley Southwestern United States 4 ArizonaNew MexicoLas Vegas Valley Chicago areaColorado 5 Northwestern United States 6 7 UtahNYC area 8 Florida also growing emerging populations in Southeast GeorgiaNorth Carolina Upper MidwestGreat PlainsNortheast 9 LanguagesMexican SpanishAmerican EnglishSpanglishIndigenous Mexican languagesAmerican SpanishChicano EnglishReligionPredominantly Catholicism 10 Related ethnic groupsHispanos Californios Neomexicanos Tejanos Floridanos Spanish Americans Chicanos other Latino Americans Native Americans in the United StatesMost Mexican Americans have varying degrees of Indigenous and European ancestry with the latter being mostly Spanish origins 21 Those of indigenous ancestry descend from one or more of the over 60 indigenous groups in Mexico approximately 200 000 people in California alone 22 It is estimated that approximately 10 of the current Mexican American population are descended from early Mexican residents such as New Mexican Hispanos Tejanos and Californios who became US citizens in 1848 through the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo which ended the Mexican American War Mexicans living in the United States after the treaty was signed were forced to choose between keeping their Mexican citizenship or becoming a US citizen Few chose to leave their homes in the States 1 The majority of these Hispanophone populations eventually adopted English as their first language and became Americanized 23 Also called Hispanos these descendants of independent Mexico from the early to middle 19th century differentiate themselves culturally from the population of Mexican Americans whose ancestors arrived in the American Southwest after the Mexican Revolution 24 25 Although most of the Mexican American population was considered white by the Treaty many continued to face discrimination in the form of Anti Mexican sentiment noted in the idea that Mexicans were too Indian to be citizens 26 Despite assurances to the contrary the property rights of formerly Mexican citizens were often not honored by the US government 27 28 29 Continuous large scale migration particularly after the 1910 Mexican Revolution added to this population During the Great Depression many Mexican Americans were repatriated or deported to Mexico An estimated 355 000 to 1 million people were repatriated in total 40 60 of whom were US citizens overwhelmingly children 30 31 32 33 34 Critical race theorist Ian Haney Lopez posited that in the 1930s community leaders promoted the term Mexican American to convey an assimilationist ideology stressing white identity and that by the 1940s and 1950s the community had fractured over the issue of cultural assimilation with some anti assimilationist youth rejecting Mexican American and instead developed an alienated pachuco culture that fashioned itself neither as Mexican nor American 35 while others developed a more assimilationist stance by promoting the Mexican American identity as a white ethnic group that had little in common with African Americans 36 The anti assimilationist challenge to Mexican American identity would form the basis of Chicano a identity in the 1960s which itself was influenced by the reclamation of Black by African Americans 37 38 Although Chicano a had previously been used as a classist and racial slur to refer to working class Mexican American people in Spanish speaking neighborhoods the Chicano Movement reclaimed the term to promote cultural revitalization and community empowerment in the 1960s and 1970s 39 40 In the 1980s following the decline of the Chicano Movement assimilation and economic mobility became a goal of many Mexican Americans in an era of conservatism 41 many of whom adopted the terms Hispanic and Latino 42 Prior to this time the United States Census provided no clear way for Mexican Americans to identify On the 1980 census the US government promoted the term Hispanic while Chicano appeared as a subcategory underneath the category of Spanish Hispanic descent 43 Immigration from Mexico increased greatly during the 1980s and 1990s and peaked in the mid 2000s With the peak of immigration in the 1980s the Immigration Amnesty was passed letting many of the Mexican immigrants get their residency in the United States 44 The Great Recession 2007 2009 resulted in a decline in immigration from Mexico 45 Contents 1 History of Mexican Americans 1 1 19th century and Early 20th century Mexican migration 1 2 Late 20th century 2 Race and ethnicity 2 1 US census bureau classifications 2 2 Politics and debate of racial classification 3 Demographics 3 1 Mexican born population over time 4 Culture 4 1 Food and drink 4 2 Music 5 Economic and social issues 5 1 Immigration issues 6 Discrimination and stereotypes 7 Social status and assimilation 7 1 Intermarriage 8 Segregation issues 8 1 Housing market practices 8 2 Battle of Chavez Ravine 8 3 Latino segregation versus Black segregation 8 4 Segregated schools 8 5 Immigration and segregation 9 The Chicano movement and the Chicano Moratorium 10 Education 10 1 Parental Involvement 11 Mexican American communities 11 1 California 11 2 Arizona 11 3 Texas 11 4 Illinois 11 5 Colorado 11 6 Other states 11 7 Other US destinations 11 8 US states by Mexican American population 11 9 Cities metro areas with the largest Mexican populations 12 Health 12 1 Diabetes 13 Notable people 14 See also 15 References 16 Bibliography further reading 17 External linksHistory of Mexican Americans EditMain article History of Mexican Americans Symbols of the Southwest a string of chili peppers a ristra and a bleached white cow s skull hang in a market near Santa Fe In 1900 there were slightly more than 500 000 Latinos of Mexican descent living in New Mexico Arizona Nevada Colorado California and Texas 46 Most were Mexican Americans of Spanish descent and other Hispanicized European settlers who settled in the Southwest during Spanish colonial times as well as local and Mexican Amerindians As early as 1813 some of the Tejanos who colonized Texas in the Spanish Colonial Period established a government in Texas that desired independence from Spanish ruled Mexico In those days there was no concept of identity as Mexican Many Mexicans were more loyal to their states provinces than to their country as a whole which was a colony of Spain This was particularly true in frontier regions such as Zacatecas Texas Yucatan Oaxaca New Mexico etc 47 As shown by the writings of colonial Tejanos such as Antonio Menchaca the Texas Revolution was initially a colonial Tejano cause Mexico encouraged immigration from the United States to settle east Texas and by 1831 English speaking settlers outnumbered Tejanos ten to one in the region Both groups were settled mostly in the eastern part of the territory 48 The Mexican government became concerned about the increasing volume of Anglo American immigration and restricted the number of settlers from the United States allowed to enter Texas Consistent with its abolition of slavery the Mexican government banned slavery within the state which angered American slave owners 49 The American settlers along with many of the Tejano rebelled against the centralized authority of Mexico City and the Santa Anna regime while other Tejano remained loyal to Mexico and still others were neutral 50 51 Author John P Schmal wrote of the effect Texas independence had on the Tejano community A native of San Antonio Juan Seguin is probably the most famous Tejano to be involved in the War of Texas Independence His story is complex because he joined the Anglo rebels and helped defeat the Mexican forces of Santa Anna But later on as Mayor of San Antonio he and other Tejanos felt the hostile encroachments of the growing Anglo power against them After receiving a series of death threats Seguin relocated his family in Mexico where he was coerced into military service and fought against the US in 1846 1848 Mexican American War 52 Although the events of 1836 led to independence for the people of Texas the Latino population of the state was very quickly disenfranchised to the extent that their political representation in the Texas State Legislature disappeared entirely for several decades Mural in Chicano Park San Diego stating All the way to the Bay As a Spanish colony the territory of California also had an established population of colonial settlers Californios is the term for the Spanish speaking residents of modern day California they were the original Mexicans regardless of race and local Hispanicized Amerindians in the region Alta California before the United States acquired it as a territory In the mid 19th century more settlers from the United States began to enter the territory In California Mexican settlement began in 1769 with the establishment of the Presidio and Catholic mission of San Diego 20 more missions were established along the California coast by 1823 along with military Presidios and civilian communities Settlers in California tended to stay close to the coast and outside of the California interior The California economy was based on agriculture and livestock In contrast to central New Spain coastal colonists found little mineral wealth Some became farmers or ranchers working for themselves on their own land or for other colonists Government officials priests soldiers and artisans settled in towns missions and presidios 53 One of the most important events in the history of Mexican settlers in California occurred in 1833 when the Mexican Government secularized the missions In effect this meant that the government took control of large and vast areas of land These lands were eventually distributed among the population in the form of Ranchos which soon became the basic socio economic units of the province 53 Relations between Californios and English speaking settlers were relatively good until 1846 when military officer John C Fremont arrived in Alta California with a United States force of 60 men on an exploratory expedition Fremont made an agreement with Comandante Castro that he would stay in the San Joaquin Valley only for the winter then move north to Oregon However Fremont remained in the Santa Clara Valley then headed towards Monterey When Castro demanded that Fremont leave Alta California Fremont rode to Gavilan Peak raised a US flag and vowed to fight to the last man to defend it After three days of tension Fremont retreated to Oregon without a shot being fired With relations between Californios and Americans quickly souring Fremont returned to Alta California where he encouraged European American settlers to seize a group of Castro s soldiers and their horses Another group seized the Presidio of Sonoma and captured Mariano Vallejo The Henry B Gonzalez Convention Center and Lila Cockrell Theater along the San Antonio River Walk The Tower of the Americas is visible in the background The Americans chose William B Ide as chosen Commander in Chief and on July 5 he proclaimed the creation of the Bear Flag Republic On July 9 US military forces reached Sonoma they lowered the Bear Flag Republic s flag replacing it with a US flag Californios organized an army to defend themselves from invading American forces after the Mexican army retreated from Alta California to defend other parts of Mexico The Californios defeated an American force in Los Angeles on September 30 1846 In turn they were defeated after the Americans reinforced their forces in what is now southern California Tens of thousands of miners and associated people arrived during the California Gold Rush and their activities in some areas meant the end of the Californios ranching lifestyle Many of the English speaking 49ers turned from mining to farming and moved often illegally onto land granted to Californios by the former Mexican government 54 The United States had first come into conflict with Mexico in the 1830s as the westward spread of United States settlements and of slavery brought significant numbers of new settlers into the region known as Tejas modern day Texas then part of Mexico The Mexican American War followed by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848 and the Gadsden Purchase in 1853 extended US control over a wide range of territory once held by Mexico including the present day borders of Texas and the states of New Mexico Colorado Utah Nevada Arizona and California 55 An example of a Chicano themed mural in the Richard Riordan Central Library Although the treaty promised that the landowners in this newly acquired territory would have their property rights preserved and protected as if they were citizens of the United States many former citizens of Mexico lost their land in lawsuits before state and federal courts over terms of land grants or as a result of legislation passed after the treaty 56 Even those statutes which Congress passed to protect the owners of property at the time of the extension of the United States borders such as the 1851 California Land Act had the effect of dispossessing Californio owners They were ruined by the cost over years of having to maintain litigation to support their land titles Following the concession of California to the United States under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo Mexicans were repeatedly targeted by legislation that targeted their socio economic standing in the area One significant instance of this is exemplified by the passage of legislation that placed the heaviest tax burden on land The fact that there was such a heavy tax on land was important to the socio economic standing of Mexican Americans because it essentially limited their ability to keep possession of the Ranchos that had been originally granted to them by the Mexican government 53 19th century and Early 20th century Mexican migration Edit The first Mexican braceros arrived in California in 1917 In the late nineteenth century liberal Mexican President Porfirio Diaz embarked on a program of economic modernization that triggered not only a wave of internal migration in Mexico from rural areas to cities but also Mexican emigration to the United States A railway network was constructed that connected central Mexico to the US border and also opened up previously isolated regions The second factor was the shift in land tenure that left Mexican peasants without title or access to land for farming on their own account 57 For the first time Mexicans in increasing numbers migrated north into the United States for better economic opportunities In the early 20th century the first main period of migration to the United States happened between the 1910s to the 1920s referred to as the Great Migration 58 During this time period the Mexican Revolution was taking place creating turmoil within and against the Mexican government causing civilians to seek out economic and political stability in the United States Over 1 3 million Mexicans relocated to the United States from 1910 well into the 1930s with significant increases each decade 59 Many of these immigrants found agricultural work being contracted under private laborers 60 During the great depression in the 1930s many Mexicans and Mexican Americans were repatriated to Mexico Many deportations were overseen by state and local authorities who acted on the encouragement of Secretary of Labor William N Doak and the Department of Labor 32 The government deported at least 82 000 people 34 Between 355 000 and 1 000 000 were repatriated or deported to Mexico in total approximately forty to sixty percent of those repatriated were birthright citizens overwhelmingly children 34 33 Voluntary repatriation was much more common during the repatriations than formal deportation 34 30 According to legal professor Kevin R Johnson the repatriation campaign was based on ethnicity and meets the modern legal standards of ethnic cleansing because it frequently ignored citizenship 31 The second period of increased migration is known as the Bracero Era from 1942 to 1964 referring to the Bracero program implemented by the United States contracting agricultural labor from Mexico due to labor shortages from the World War II draft An estimated 4 6 million Mexican immigrants were pulled into the United States through the Bracero Program from the 1940s to the 1960s 61 The lack of agricultural laborers due to increases in military drafts for World War II opened up a chronic need for low wage workers to fill jobs Late 20th century Edit Mariachi bands who are available for hire wait at the Mariachi Plaza in Los Angeles While Mexican Americans are concentrated in the Southwest California Arizona New Mexico and Texas during World War I many moved to industrial communities such as St Louis Chicago Detroit Cleveland Pittsburgh and other steel producing regions where they gained industrial jobs Like European immigrants they were attracted to work that did not require proficiency in English Industrial restructuring in the second half of the century put many Mexican Americans out of work in addition to people of other ethnic groups Their industrial skills were not as useful in the changing economies of these areas 62 LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes The Delano grape strike was influenced by the Filipino American farm worker strike in Coachella Valley May 1965 In which Migrant Filipino American workers asked for a 0 15 hour raise 63 The 1965 Delano grape strike sparked by mostly Filipino American farmworkers became an intersectional struggle when labor leaders and voting rights and civil rights activists Dolores Huerta founder of the National Farm Workers Association and her co leader Cesar Chavez united with the strikers to form the United Farm Workers Huerta s slogan Si se puede Spanish for Yes we can was popularized by Chavez s fast and became a rallying cry for the Chicano Movement or Mexican American civil rights movement The Chicano movement aimed for a variety of civil rights reforms and was inspired by the civil rights movement demands ranged from the restoration of land grants to farm workers rights to enhanced education to voting and political rights as well as emerging awareness of collective history The Chicano walkouts of antiwar students is traditionally seen as the start of the more radical phase of the Chicano movement 64 65 Since there weren t many job opportunities in their country Mexicans moved to the United States to help them receive a job However when they came to the United States their wages were extremely low 16 Trend of Mexican migration to the United States Here the term immigrant refers to those who were not born in the United States but are now currently residing in the United States This can include naturalized US citizens legal permanent residents employees and students on visas and the undocumented 59 During this period civil rights groups such as the National Mexican American Anti Defamation Committee were founded By the early 21st century the states with the largest percentages and populations of Mexican Americans are California Arizona New Mexico Texas Colorado Nevada and Utah There have also been markedly increasing populations in Oklahoma Pennsylvania and Illinois 66 In terms of religion Mexican Americans are primarily Roman Catholic 67 A large minority are Evangelical Protestants Notably according to a Pew Hispanic Center report in 2006 and the Pew Religious Landscape Survey in 2008 Mexican Americans are significantly less likely than other Latino groups to abandon Catholicism for Protestant churches 68 69 In 2008 Yes We Can in Spanish Si se puede was adopted as the 2008 campaign slogan of Barack Obama whose election and reelection as the first African American president underlined the growing importance of the Mexican American vote 45 The failure of both parties presidents to properly enact immigration reform in the United States led to an increased polarization of how to handle an increasingly diverse population as Mexican Americans spread out from traditional centers in the Southwest and Chicago Most Mexican Roma came to the United States from Argentina 70 In 2015 the United States admitted 157 227 Mexican immigrants 71 and as of November 2016 1 31 million Mexicans were on the waiting list to immigrate to the United States through legal means 72 A 2014 survey showed that 34 of Mexicans would immigrate to the United States if given the opportunity with 17 saying they would do it illegally 73 Race and ethnicity EditMain article Mexicans Ethnically Mexican Americans are a diverse population made up primarily of European ancestry and Indigenous ancestry and usually a mix of both mestizo but also on a smaller scale African East Asian Middle Eastern descent mainly Lebanese The majority of the Mexican population identifies as mestizo In colonial times Mestizo was meant to be a person of mixed heritage particularly European and Native American Nonetheless the meaning of the word has changed through time currently being used to refer to the segment of the Mexican population who is of at least partial Indigenous ancestry but does not speak Indigenous languages 74 Thus in Mexico the term Mestizo while still mostly applying to people who are of mixed European and Indigenous descent to various degrees the term has become more of a cultural label rather than a racial one It is vaguely defined and includes people who do not have Indigenous ancestry people who do not have European ancestry as well as people of mixed and sometimes predominant African ancestry 75 Such transformation of the word is not a casualty but the result of a concept known as mestizaje which was promoted by the post revolutionary Mexican government in an effort to create a united Mexican ethno cultural identity with no racial distinctions 76 It is because of this that sometimes the Mestizo population in Mexico is estimated to be as high as 93 of the Mexican population 77 Per the 2010 US Census the majority 52 8 of Mexican Americans identified as being white 78 The remainder identified themselves as being of some other race 39 5 two or more races 5 0 Native American 1 4 black 0 9 and Asian Pacific Islander 0 4 78 It is notable that only 5 of Mexican Americans reported being of two or more races despite the presumption of mestizaje among the Mexican population in Mexico 2010 US Census 78 Self identified Race Percent of populationWhite alone 52 8 Black 0 9 Asian 0 4 American Indians and Alaska Natives 1 4 Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders 0 2 Two or more races 5 0 Some Other Race 39 5 Total 100 This identification as some other race reflects activism among Mexican Americans as claiming a cultural status and working for their rights in the United States as well as the separation due to different language and culture Latinos are not a racial classification however but an ethnic group Genetic studies made in the Mexican population have found European ancestry ranging from 56 79 going to 60 80 64 81 and up to 78 82 In general Mexicans have both European and Amerindian ancestries and the proportion varies by region and individuals African ancestry is also present but in lower proportion There is genetic asymmetry with the direct paternal line predominately European and the maternal line predominately Amerindian Younger Mexican Americans tend to have more Indigenous ancestry in those studied born between the 1940s and 1990s there was an average increase in ancestry of 0 4 per year Though there is no simple explanation it is possibly some combination of assortative mating changes in migration patterns over time with more recent immigrants having higher levels of Indigenous ancestry population growth and other unexamined factors 83 For instance a 2006 study conducted by Mexico s National Institute of Genomic Medicine INMEGEN which genotyped 104 samples reported that Mestizo Mexicans are 58 96 European 35 05 Asian primarily Amerindian and 5 03 Other 84 According to a 2009 report by the Mexican Genome Project which sampled 300 Mestizos from six Mexican states and one Indigenous group the gene pool of the Mexican mestizo population was calculated to be 55 2 percent Indigenous 41 8 European 1 0 African and 1 2 Asian 77 A 2012 study published by the Journal of Human Genetics found the deep paternal ancestry of the Mexican Mestizo population to be predominately European 64 9 followed by Amerindian 30 8 and Asian 1 2 85 An autosomal ancestry study performed on Mexico City reported that the European ancestry of Mexicans was 52 with the rest being Amerindian and a small African contribution additionally maternal ancestry was analyzed with 47 being of European origin Unlike previous studies which only included Mexicans who self identified as Mestizos the only criteria for sample selection in this study was that the volunteers self identified as Mexicans 86 While Mexico does not have comprehensive modern racial censuses some international publications believe that Mexican people of predominately European descent Spanish or other European make up approximately one sixth 16 5 this based on the figures of the last racial census in the country made in 1921 87 According to an opinion poll conducted by the Latinobarometro organization in 2011 52 of Mexican respondents said they were mestizos 19 Indigenous 6 white 2 mulattos and 3 other race 88 US census bureau classifications Edit As the United States borders expanded the United States Census Bureau changed its racial classification methods for Mexican Americans under United States jurisdiction The Bureau s classification system has evolved significantly from its inception From 1790 to 1850 there was no distinct racial classification of Mexican Americans in the US census The categories recognized by the Census Bureau were White Free People of Color and Black The Census Bureau estimates that during this period the number of persons who could not be categorized as white or black did not exceed 0 25 of the total population based on 1860 census data 89 From 1850 through 1920 the Census Bureau expanded its racial categories to include multi racial persons under Mestizos Mulattos as well as new categories of distinction of Amerindians and Asians It classified Mexicans and Mexican Americans as white 89 The 1930 US census added a separate category for color or race which declassified Mexicans as white Census workers were instructed to write W for white and Mex for Mexican Other categories were Neg for Negro In for Amerindian Ch for Chinese Jp for Japanese Fil for Filipino Hin for Hindu and Kor for Korean 90 In the 1940 census due to widespread protests by the Mexican American community following the 1930 changes Mexican Americans were re classified as White Instructions for enumerators were Mexicans Report White W for Mexicans unless they are definitely of Indigenous or other non white race During the same census however the bureau began to track the White population of Spanish mother tongue This practice continued through the 1960 census 89 The 1960 census also used the title Spanish surnamed American in their reporting data of Mexican Americans this category also covered Cuban Americans Puerto Ricans and others under the same category From 1970 to 1980 there was a dramatic increase in the number of people who identified as of Other Race in the census reflecting the addition of a question on Latino origin to the 100 percent questionnaire an increased propensity for Latinos to identify as other than White as they agitated for civil rights and a change in editing procedures to accept reports of Other race for respondents who wrote in ethnic Latino entries such as Mexican Cuban or Puerto Rican In 1970 such responses in the Other race category were reclassified and tabulated as white During this census the bureau attempted to identify all Latinos by use of the following criteria in sampled sets 89 Spanish speakers and persons belonging to a household where the head of household was a Spanish speaker persons with Spanish heritage by birth location or surname Persons who self identified Spanish origin or descent From 1980 on the Census Bureau has collected data on Latino origin on a 100 percent basis The bureau has noted in 2002 that an increasing number of respondents identify as of Latino origin but not of the White race 89 For certain purposes respondents who wrote in Chicano or Mexican or indeed almost all Latino origin groups in the Some other race category were automatically re classified into the White race group 91 Politics and debate of racial classification Edit Romualdo Pacheco a Californio statesman and first Mexican to serve in the US House of Representatives 1877 Octaviano Larrazolo became the first Mexican American to serve in the US Senate 1928 Lucille Roybal Allard daughter of Edward R Roybal first Latino chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus In some cases legal classification of White racial status has made it difficult for Mexican American rights activists to prove minority discrimination In the case Hernandez v Texas 1954 civil rights lawyers for the appellant named Pedro Hernandez were confronted with a paradox because Mexican Americans were classified as White by the federal government and not as a separate race in the census lower courts held that they were not being denied equal protection by being tried by juries that excluded Mexican Americans by practice The lower court ruled there was no violation of the Fourteenth Amendment by excluding people with Mexican ancestry among the juries Attorneys for the state of Texas and judges in the state courts contended that the amendment referred only to racial not nationality groups Thus since Mexican Americans were tried by juries composed of their racial group whites their constitutional rights were not violated The US Supreme Court ruling in Hernandez v Texas case held that nationality groups could be protected under the Fourteenth Amendment and it became a landmark in the civil rights history of the United States 92 93 While Mexican Americans served in all White units during World War II many Mexican American veterans continued to face discrimination when they arrived home they created the G I Forum to work for equal treatment 94 In times and places in the United States where Mexicans were classified as White they were permitted by law to intermarry with what today are termed non Latino whites Social customs typically approved of such marriages only if the Mexican partner was not of visible Indigenous ancestry 95 In the late 1960s the founding of the Crusade for Justice in Denver and the land grant movement in New Mexico in 1967 set the bases for what would become known as Chicano Mexican American nationalism The 1968 Los Angeles California school walkouts expressed Mexican American demands to end de facto ethnic segregation also based on residential patterns increase graduation rates and reinstate a teacher fired for supporting student political organizing A notable event in the Chicano movement was the 1972 Convention of La Raza Unida United People Party which organized with the goal of creating a third party to give Chicanos political power in the United States 94 In the past Mexicans were legally considered White because either they were accepted as being of Spanish ancestry or because of early treaty obligations to Spaniards and Mexicans that conferred citizenship status to Mexican peoples before the American Civil War Numerous slave states bordered Mexican territory at a time when whiteness was nearly a prerequisite for US citizenship in those states 96 97 Although Mexican Americans were legally classified as white in terms of official federal policy socially they were seen as too Indian to be treated as such 26 Many organizations businesses and homeowners associations and local legal systems had official policies in the early 20th century to exclude Mexican Americans in a racially discriminatory way 98 Throughout the Southwest discrimination in wages was institutionalized in White wages versus lower Mexican wages for the same job classifications 98 For Mexican Americans opportunities for employment were largely limited to guest worker programs 98 The bracero program begun in 1942 during World War II when many United States men were drafted for war allowed Mexicans temporary entry into the United States as migrant workers at farms throughout California and the Southwest This program continued until 1964 84 99 100 A number of western states passed anti miscegenation laws directed chiefly at Chinese and Japanese As Mexican Americans were then classified as White by the census they could not legally marry African or Asian Americans See Perez v Sharp 101 According to historian Neil Foley in his book The White Scourge Mexicans Blacks and Poor Whites in Texas Cotton Culture Mexicans and Mexican Americans in Texas did marry non Whites typically without reprisal 102 While of racial segregation and discrimination against both Mexican American and African American minorities were subject to segregation and racial discrimination they were treated differently There were legal racial demarcations between Whites and blacks in a state like Texas whereas the line between Whites and Mexican Americans was not legally defined Mexican Americans could attend White schools and colleges which were racially segregated against blacks mix socially with Whites and marry Whites These choices were prohibited to African Americans under state laws Racial segregation operated separately from economic class and was rarely as rigid for Mexican Americans as it was for African Americans For instance even when some African Americans in Texas enjoyed higher economic status than Mexican Americans or Whites in an area they were still segregated by law 103 page needed Demographics Edit Janet Murguia is president of UnidosUS the United States largest Latino nonprofit advocacy organization Mexican born population over time Edit Year Population 13 Percentage of all US immigrants1850 13 300 0 61860 27 500 0 71870 42 400 0 81880 68 400 1 01890 77 900 0 81900 103 400 1 01910 221 900 1 61920 486 400 3 51930 641 500 4 51940 357 800 3 11950 451 400 3 91960 575 900 5 91970 759 700 7 91980 2 199 200 15 61990 4 298 000 21 72000 9 177 500 29 52010 11 711 100 29 32019 10 931 900 24 3Culture EditMain articles Mexican cuisine in the United States and Mexican American literature A Quinceanera celebration in Santa Fe New Mexico Food and drink Edit Mexican Americans have influenced American cuisine burritos enchiladas guacamole nachos tacos tamales and tortillas are regular in American vernacular 104 The cuisines of New Mexican and Tex Mex are native to the cuisine of the Southwestern United States and Mexican cuisine has influenced Californian cuisine 105 Music Edit The popular radio format Regional Mexican includes Mexican styles of music Norteno ranchera Conjunto Son Jarocho and mariachi 106 It also includes the indigenous and Mexican American music styles of the New Mexico music Tejano music Chicano rock and Chicano rap which originate in the United States Economic and social issues EditImmigration issues Edit See also 2006 United States immigration reform protests and Illegal immigration to the United States See also Strangers No Longer Together on the Journey of Hope a pastoral letter written by both the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and the Mexican Episcopal Conference which deals with the issue of migration in the context of the United States and Mexico Cesar Chavez s supporters say his work led to numerous improvements for union laborers Although the UFW faltered a few years after Chavez died in 1993 he became an iconic folk saint in the pantheon of Mexican Americans Since the 1960s Mexican immigrants have met a significant portion of the demand for cheap labor in the United States 107 Fear of deportation makes them highly vulnerable to exploitation by employers Many employers however have developed a don t ask don t tell attitude toward hiring undocumented Mexican nationals In May 2006 hundreds of thousands of undocumented immigrants Mexicans and other nationalities walked out of their jobs across the country in protest to support immigration reform many in hopes of a path to citizenship similar to the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 signed into law by President Ronald Reagan which granted citizenship to Mexican nationals living and working without documentation in the US Governmentalities have been the result of unequal relations with its northern neighbors versus a response to more locally driven needs 108 US politicians cited numbers as high as 20 million undocumented immigrants in the United States without providing statistical proof 16 A rally on May Day 2006 in Chicago The protests began in response to proposed legislation known as H R 4437 which would raise penalties for illegal immigration and classify undocumented immigrants and anyone who helped them enter or remain in the US as felons Even legal immigrants to the United States both from Mexico and elsewhere have spoken out against illegal immigration However according to a survey conducted by the Pew Research Center in June 2007 63 of Americans would support an immigration policy that would put undocumented immigrants on a path to citizenship if they pass background checks pay fines and have jobs learn English while 30 would oppose such a plan The survey also found that if this program was instead labeled amnesty 54 would support it while 39 would oppose 109 Alan Greenspan former Chairman of the Federal Reserve has said that the growth of the working age population is a large factor in keeping the economy growing and that immigration can be used to grow that population According to Greenspan by 2030 the growth of the US workforce will slow from 1 percent to 1 2 percent while the percentage of the population over 65 years will rise from 13 percent to perhaps 20 percent 110 Greenspan has also stated that the current immigration problem could be solved with a stroke of the pen referring to the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2007 which would have strengthened border security created a guest worker program and put undocumented immigrants currently residing in the US on a path to citizenship if they met certain conditions 111 Discrimination and stereotypes EditMain articles Anti Mexican sentiment and LatinophobiaSee also Madrigal v Quilligan Lowrider began in the Mexican American barrios of Los Angeles in the mid to late 1940s and during the post war prosperity of the 1950s Initially some youths would place sandbags in the trunk of their customized cars in order to create a lowered effect Throughout US history Mexican Americans have endured various types of negative stereotypes which have long circulated in media and popular culture 112 113 Mexican Americans have also faced discrimination based on ethnicity race culture poverty and use of the Spanish language 114 Mexicans faced racially segregated schooling in a number of Western states during the Depression era In Wyoming the segregation of Mexican children regardless of US citizenship mirrored the South s Jim Crow laws The segregation of Mexicans also occurred in California and in neighboring Colorado Montana and Nebraska 115 116 Since the majority of undocumented immigrants in the US have traditionally been from Latin America the Mexican American community has been the subject of widespread immigration raids During The Great Depression the United States government sponsored a Mexican Repatriation program which was intended to encourage people to voluntarily move to Mexico but thousands were deported against their will During the 1930s between 355 000 and 1 million individuals were repatriated or deported to Mexico approximately 40 to 60 percent of which were actually United States citizens overwhelmingly children Voluntary repatriation was far more common than formal deportation 34 33 117 118 In the post war era the Justice Department launched Operation Wetback 118 Sign from a restaurant in Dallas Texas now located in the National Civil Rights Museum During World War II more than 300 000 Mexican Americans served in the US armed forces 56 Mexican Americans were generally integrated into regular military units however many Mexican American War veterans were discriminated against and even denied medical services by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs when they arrived home 84 In 1948 war veteran Hector P Garcia founded the American GI Forum to address the concerns of Mexican American veterans who were being discriminated against The AGIF s first campaign was on the behalf of Felix Longoria a Mexican American private who was killed in the Philippines while in the line of duty Upon the return of his body to his hometown of Three Rivers Texas he was denied funeral services because of his nationality Food truck Mi Lindo Huetamo 2 in Houston Texas In the 1948 case of Perez v Sharp the Supreme Court of California recognized that the ban on interracial marriage violated the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution from 1868 The case involved Andrea Perez a Mexican American woman listed as White and Sylvester Davis an African American man 119 In 2006 Time magazine reported that the number of hate groups in the United States increased by 33 since 2000 with illegal immigration being used as a foundation for recruitment 120 According to the 2011 Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI Hate Crimes Statistics Report 56 9 of the 939 victims of crimes motivated by a bias toward the victims ethnicity or national origin were directed at Latinos 121 In California the state with the largest Mexican American population the number of hate crimes committed against Latinos almost doubled from 2003 to 2007 122 123 In 2011 hate crimes against Latinos declined 31 in the United States and 43 in California 124 The 2019 El Paso shooting which resulted in 23 deaths was a result of the gunman s racist attitude towards Mexican Americans and Latino immigrants in general Social status and assimilation EditSee also Tex Mex and Mexican cuisine in the United States America Tropical There have been increases in average personal and household incomes for Mexican Americans in the 21st century US born Americans of Mexican heritage earn more and are represented more in the middle and upper class segments more than most recently arriving Mexican immigrants Most immigrants from Mexico as elsewhere come from the lower classes and from families generationally employed in lower skilled jobs They also are most likely from rural areas Thus many new Mexican immigrants are not skilled in white collar professions Recently some professionals from Mexico have been migrating but to make the transition from one country to another involves re training and re adjusting to conform to US laws i e professional licensing is required 125 Millions crossed into the United States to find work that would help them survive as well as sustain their families in Mexico 126 Mexican food has become part of the mainstream American market just as Italian food did decades before and assimilated to the American market like Tex Mex According to James P Smith the children and grandchildren of Latino immigrants tend to lessen educational and income gaps with White American Immigrant Latino men earn about half of what whites make while second generation US born Latinos make about 78 percent of the salaries of their white counterparts and by the third generation US born Latinos make on average identical wages to their US born white counterparts 127 However the number of Mexican American professionals have been growing in size since 2010 128 Huntington 2005 argues that the sheer number concentration linguistic homogeneity and other characteristics of Latin American immigrants will erode the dominance of English as a nationally unifying language weaken the country s dominant cultural values and promote ethnic allegiances over a primary identification as an American Testing these hypotheses with data from the US Census and national and Los Angeles opinion surveys Citrin et al 2007 show that Latinos generally acquire English and lose Spanish rapidly beginning with the second generation and appear to be no more or less religious or committed to the work ethic than native born non Mexican American whites However the children and grandchildren of Mexican immigrants were able to make close ties with their extended families in Mexico since United States shares a 2 000 mile border with Mexico Many had the opportunity to visit Mexico on a relatively frequent basis As a result many Mexicans were able to maintain a strong Mexican culture language and relationship with others 129 South et al 2005 examine Latino spatial assimilation and inter neighborhood geographic mobility Their longitudinal analysis of seven hundred Mexican Puerto Rican and Cuban immigrants followed from 1990 to 1995 finds broad support for hypotheses derived from the classical account of assimilation into American society High income English language use and embeddedness in American social contexts increased Latin American immigrants geographic mobility into multi ethnic neighborhoods US citizenship and years spent in the United States were positively associated with geographic mobility into different neighborhoods while co ethnic contact and prior experiences of ethnic discrimination decreased the likelihood that Latino immigrants would move from their original neighborhoods and into non Latino white census tracts 130 Intermarriage Edit Jessica Alba s mother has Danish Welsh German and French ancestry while her paternal grandparents who were born in California were the children of Mexican immigrants 131 According to 2000 census data US born ethnic Mexicans have a high degree of intermarriage with non Latino whites Based on a sample size of 38 911 US born Mexican husbands and 43 527 US born Mexican wives 132 50 6 of US born Mexican men and 45 3 of US born Mexican women were married to US born Mexicans 132 26 7 of US born Mexican men and 28 1 of US born Mexican women were married to non Latino whites and 132 13 6 of US born Mexican men and 17 4 of US born Mexican women were married to Mexico born Mexicans 132 In addition based on 2000 data there is a significant amount of ethnic absorption of ethnic Mexicans into the mainstream population with 16 of the children of mixed marriages not being identified in the census as Mexican 133 A study done by the National Research Council US Panel on Latinos in the United States published in 2006 looked at not only marriages but also non marriage unions It found that since at least 1980 marriage for females across all Latino ethnic groups including Mexican Americans has been in a steady decline 134 In addition the percentage of births to unmarried mothers increased for females of Mexican descent from 20 3 in 1980 to 40 8 in 2000 more than doubling in that time frame 134 The study also found that for females of all Latino ethnicities including Mexican origin considerably fewer births to unmarried Latino mothers involve partnerships with non Latino white males than is the case for married Latino mothers Second births outside marriage are more likely to involve a non Latino black father than births within marriage 134 Additionally Unions among partners from different Latino origins or between Latinos and non Latino blacks are considerably more evident in cohabitation and parenthood than they are in marriage In particular unions between Latinos and non Latino blacks are prominent in parenthood especially non marital births 134 Furthermore for 29 7 of unmarried births to native born females of Mexican origin and 40 of unmarried births to females of Other Latino origin which may include Mexican American information on the father s ethnicity was missing 134 The study was supported by the US Census Bureau amongst other sources 134 Segregation issues EditHousing market practices Edit Studies have shown that the segregation among Mexican Americans and Mexican immigrants seems to be declining One study from 1984 found that Mexican American applicants were offered the same housing terms and conditions as non Latino white Americans They were asked to provide the same information regarding employment income credit checks etc and asked to meet the same general qualifications of their non Latino white peers 135 In this same study it was found that Mexican Americans were more likely than non Latino white Americans to be asked to pay a security deposit or application fee 135 and Mexican American applicants were also more likely to be placed onto a waiting list than non Latino white applicants 135 Battle of Chavez Ravine Edit View of downtown and the Palos Verdes Peninsula The Battle of Chavez Ravine has several meanings but often refers to controversy surrounding government acquisition of land largely owned by Mexican Americans in Los Angeles Chavez Ravine over approximately ten years 1951 1961 The eventual result was the removal of the entire population of Chavez Ravine from land on which Dodger Stadium was later constructed 136 The great majority of the Chavez Ravine land was acquired to make way for proposed public housing The public housing plan that had been advanced as politically progressive and had resulted in the removal of the Mexican American landowners of Chavez Ravine was abandoned after passage of a public referendum prohibiting the original housing proposal and election of a conservative Los Angeles mayor opposed to public housing Years later the land acquired by the government in Chavez Ravine was dedicated by the city of Los Angeles as the site of what is now Dodger Stadium 136 Latino segregation versus Black segregation Edit Viramontes childhood neighborhood was divided by the East LA interchange in the early 1960s The novel Their Dogs Came with Them focuses on the freeway construction and difficult conditions for the Mexican Americans living in this area at the time When comparing the contemporary segregation of Mexican Americans to that of Black Americans some scholars claim that Latino segregation is less severe and fundamentally different from Black residential segregation suggesting that the segregation faced by Latinos is more likely to be due to factors such as lower socioeconomic status and immigration while the segregation of African Americans is more likely to be due to larger issues of the history of racism in the US 137 Legally Mexican Americans could vote and hold elected office however it was not until the creation of organizations such as the League of United Latin America Citizens and the G I Forum that Mexican Americans began to achieve political influence Edward Roybal s election to the Los Angeles City Council in 1949 and then to Congress in 1962 also represented this rising Mexican American political power 138 In the late 1960s the founding of the Crusade for Justice in Denver in and the land grant movement in New Mexico in 1967 set the bases for what would become the Chicano Mexican American nationalism The 1968 Los Angeles school walkouts expressed Mexican American demands to end segregation increase graduation rates and reinstate a teacher fired for supporting student organizing A notable event in the Chicano movement was the 1972 Convention of La Raza Unida United People Party which organized with the goal of creating a third party that would give Chicanos political power in the United States 94 Map of Los Angeles County showing percentage of population self identified as Mexican in ancestry or national origin by census tracts Heaviest concentrations are in East Los Angeles Echo Park Silver Lake South Los Angeles and San Pedro Wilmington In the past Mexicans were legally considered White because either they were considered to be of full Spanish heritage or because of early treaty obligations to Spaniards and Mexicans that conferred citizenship status to Mexican peoples at a time when whiteness was a prerequisite for US citizenship 96 97 Although Mexican Americans were legally classified as White in terms of official federal policy many organizations businesses and homeowners associations and local legal systems had official policies to exclude Mexican Americans Throughout the southwest discrimination in wages were institutionalized in white wages versus lower Mexican wages for the same job classifications For Mexican Americans opportunities for employment were largely limited to guest worker programs The bracero program which began in 1942 and officially ended in 1964 allowed them temporary entry into the United States as migrant workers in farms throughout California and the Southwest 84 98 99 100 Mexican Americans legally classified as White following anti miscegenation laws in most western states until the 1960s could not legally marry African or Asian Americans See Perez v Sharp 119 However most were not socially considered white and therefore according to Historian Neil Foley in the book The White Scourge Mexicans Blacks and Poor Whites in Texas Cotton Culture Mexicans and Mexican Americans did marry non whites typically without reprisal Despite the similarities between Mexican American and African American patterns of segregation there were important differences The racial demarcations between whites and blacks in a state like Texas were inviolable whereas those between whites and Mexican Americans were not It was possible for Mexican Americans to attend white schools and colleges mix socially with whites and marry whites all of these things were impossible for African Americans largely due to the legalized nature of black white segregation Racial segregation was rarely as rigid for Mexican Americans as it was for African Americans even in situations where African Americans enjoyed higher economic status than Mexican Americans 103 Segregated schools Edit Mendez v Westminster was a 1947 federal court case that challenged Mexican remedial schools in Orange County California In its ruling the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in an en banc decision held that the forced segregation of Mexican American students into separate Mexican schools was unconstitutional and unlawful because Mexicans were white It was the first ruling in the United States in favor of desegregation During certain periods Mexican American children sometimes were forced to register at Mexican schools where classroom conditions were poor the school year was shorter and the quality of education was substandard 139 Various reasons for the inferiority of the education given to Mexican American students have been listed by James A Ferg Cadima including inadequate resources poor equipment unfit building construction In 1923 the Texas Education Survey Commission found that the school year for some non white groups was 1 6 months shorter than the average school year 139 Some have interpreted the shortened school year as a means of social control implementing policies to ensure that Mexican Americans would maintain the unskilled labor force required for a strong economy A lesser education would serve to confine Mexican Americans to the bottom rung of the social ladder By limiting the number of days that Mexican Americans could attend school and allotting time for these same students to work in mainly agricultural and seasonal jobs the prospects for higher education and upward mobility were slim 139 Immigration and segregation Edit El Paso Morning Times newspaper January 30 1917 headlinedː Bill Before Legislature to Prevent Mexicans Voting depicts the 1917 Bath Riots begun by Carmelita Torres at the Santa Fe International Bridge disinfecting plant at the El Paso Texas and Juarez Mexico border Immigration hubs are popular destinations for Latino immigrants These segregated areas have historically served the purpose of allowing immigrants to become comfortable in the United States accumulate wealth and eventually leave 140 This model of immigration and residential segregation explained above is the model which has historically been accurate in describing the experiences of Latino immigrants However the patterns of immigration seen today no longer follows this model This old model is termed the standard spatial assimilation model More contemporary models are the polarization model and the diffusion model The spatial assimilation model posits that as immigrants would live within this country s borders they would simultaneously become more comfortable in their new surroundings their socioeconomic status would rise and their ability to speak English would increase The combination of these changes would allow for the immigrant to move out of the barrio and into the dominant society This type of assimilation reflects the experiences of immigrants of the early twentieth century 137 Polarization model suggests that the immigration of non black minorities into the United States further separates blacks and whites as though the new immigrants are a buffer between them This creates a hierarchy in which blacks are at the bottom whites are at the top and other groups fill the middle In other words the polarization model posits that Asians and Latinos are less segregated than their African American peers because white American society would rather live closer to Asians or Latinos than African Americans 140 The diffusion model has also been suggested as a way of describing the immigrant s experience within the United States This model is rooted in the belief that as time passes more and more immigrants enter the country This model suggests that as the United States becomes more populated with a more diverse set of peoples stereotypes and discriminatory practices will decrease as awareness and acceptance increase The diffusion model predicts that new immigrants will break down old patterns of discrimination and prejudice as one becomes more and more comfortable with the more diverse neighborhoods that are created through the influx of immigrants 140 Applying this model to the experiences of Mexican Americans forces one to see Mexican American immigrants as positive additions to the American melting pot in which as more additions are made to the pot the more equal and accepting society will become The Chicano movement and the Chicano Moratorium EditSee also Chicano movement and Chicano studies A plaque honoring Ruben Salazar mounted in the Globe Lobby of the Los Angeles Times Building in downtown Los Angeles The Chicano Moratorium formally known as the National Chicano Moratorium Committee was a movement of Chicano anti war activists that built a broad based but fragile coalition of Mexican American groups to organize opposition to the Vietnam War The committee was led by activists from local colleges and members of the Brown Berets a group with roots in the high school student movement that staged walkouts in 1968 known as the East L A walkouts also called blowouts 141 The best known historical fact of the Moratorium was the death of Ruben Salazar known for his reporting on civil rights and police brutality The official story is that Salazar was killed by a tear gas canister fired by a member of the Los Angeles County Sheriff s Department into the Silver Dollar Cafe at the conclusion of the National Chicano Moratorium March 142 Education EditParental Involvement Edit Sal Castro was a Mexican American educator and activist He was most well known for his role in the 1968 East L A walkouts See Walkout film Parents are commonly associated with being a child s first teacher As the child grows older the parent s role in their child s learning may change however a parent will often continue to serve as a role model There are multiple research articles that have looked at parental involvement and education A key aspect of parental involvement in education is that it can be transmitted in many ways For a long time there has been a misconception that the parents of Mexican American students are not involved in their children s education however multiple studies have demonstrated that parents are involved in their children s education Valencia amp Black 2002 143 It is important to know that the parents of Mexican American students frequently display their involvement through untraditional methods such as consejos home base practices and high academic expectations Lauro Cavazos Secretary of Education from August 1988 to December 1990 Literature has demonstrated that parental involvement has had a positive influence in the academic achievement of Mexican American students Studies have shown that Mexican families show their value towards education by using untraditional methods Kiyama 2011 144 One educational practice that is commonly used among Mexican families are consejos advice Additional research has supported the idea that parents consejos have had a significant influence on the education of Mexican American students Espino 2016 145 studied the influence that parental involvement had on seven 1st generation Mexican American PhDs The study found that one of the participant s father would frequently use consejos to encourage his son to continue his education The father s consejos served as an encouragement tool which motivated the participant to continue his education Consejos are commonly associated with the parents occupation Parents use their occupation as leverage to encourage their child to continue his or her education or else they may end up working an undesirable job Espino 2016 While this might not be the most common form of parental involvement studies have shown that it has been an effective tool that encourages Mexican American students Although that might be an effective tool for Mexican American students a mother can be just as an important figure for consejos A mother s role teaches their child the importance of everyday tasks such as knowing how to cook clean and care for oneself in order to be independent and also to help out around the house The children of single mothers have a huge impact on their children in pushing them to be successful in school in order to have a better life than what they provided to their children Most single mothers live in poverty and are dependent of the government so they want the best for their children so they are always encouraging their children to be focused and do their best Protesters are seen in June 2011 in support of the Tucson Unified School District s Mexican American studies program A new state law HB2281 effectively ended the program saying it was divisive Another study emphasized the importance of home based parental involvement Altschul 2011 146 conducted a study that tested the effects of six different types of parental involvement and their effect on Mexican American students The study used previous data from the National Education Longitudinal Study NELS of 1988 The data was used to evaluate the influence of parental practices in the 8th grade and their effect on students once they were in the 10th grade Altschul 2011 noted that home based parental involvement had a more positive effect on the academic achievement of Mexican American students than involvement in school organizations The literature suggests that parental involvement in the school setting is not necessary parents can impact the academic achievement of their children from their home Additional literature has demonstrated that parent involvement also comes in the form of parent expectations Valencia and Black 2002 argued that Mexican parents place a significant amount of value on education and hold high expectations for their children The purpose of their study was to debunk the notion that Mexicans do not value education by providing evidence that shows the opposite Setting high expectations and expressing their desire for their children to be academically successful has served as powerful tools to increase of the academic achievement among Mexican American students Valencia amp Black 2002 Keith and Lichtman 1995 147 also conducted a research study that measured the influence of parental involvement and academic achievement The data was collected from the NELS and used a total of 1 714 students that identified as Mexican American Chicana o The study found a higher level of academic achievement among 8th grade Mexican American students and parents who had high educational aspirations for their children Keith amp Lichtman 1995 Mexican American family eating a meal Additional research done by Carranza You Chhuon and Hudley 2009 148 added support to the idea that high parental expectations were associated with higher achievement levels among Mexican American students Carranza et al 2009 studied 298 Mexican American high school students They studied whether perceived parental involvement acculturation and self esteem had any effect on academic achievement and aspirations Results from their study demonstrated that perceived parental involvement had an influence on the students academic achievement and aspirations Additionally Carranza et al noted that among females those who perceived that their parents expected them to get good grades tended to study more and have higher academic aspirations 2009 The findings suggest that parental expectations can affect the academic performance of Mexican American students Based on current literature one can conclude that parental involvement is an extremely important aspect of Mexican American students education The studies demonstrated that parental involvement is not limited to participating in school activities at the school instead parental involvement can be displayed through various forms There are numerous studies that suggest that parental expectations are associated with the achievement level of Mexican American students Future research should continue to study the reasons why Mexican American students perform better when their parents expect them to do well in school Furthermore future research can also look into whether gender influences parental expectations Stand and Deliver was an inductee of the 2011 National Film Registry list 149 150 The National Film Board said that it was one of the most popular of a new wave of narrative feature films produced in the 1980s by Latino filmmakers and that it celebrates in a direct approachable and impactful way values of self betterment through hard work and power through knowledge 150 Mexican American communities EditMain article List of Mexican American communities Oasis Drive Inn with mural of a scarlet macaw on US Highway 83 in Crystal City Texas City Terrace streets Two Mexican American boys at a Dia de Los Muertos celebration in Greeley Colorado Los Angeles attracts Mexican American immigrants because of its rich Spanish and Mexican architecture history and culture Large Mexican American populations by both size and per capita exist in the following American cities California Edit Los Angeles California area The city proper is home to over 1 2 million of Mexican ancestry another 2 3 million throughout Los Angeles County and a total of about 6 3 million in the five county Greater Los Angeles Area Largest Mexican ancestry populated city in the United States according to the 2010 census L A is now 31 9 of Mexican descent with numerous Central American national groups East Los Angeles California Unincorporated community of roughly 130 000 name synonymous with Mexican Americans 97 Latino 88 of Mexicans are immigrant 40 of east L A residents reportedly Mexican including American born 151 Montebello California Over 62 of the population is Mexican 152 Culver City California Also the site of the infamous Zoot Suit Riots in 1943 Long Beach California Third largest city in Southern California one of many cities in the region with a large Mexican Latin American population South Gate California Over 70 77 of the population is Mexican or Mexican American 153 La Puente California About two thirds are of Mexican ancestry or Latino one of the largest Latino in percentage the most Mexican American community populations in California Downey California Between 45 and 50 are of Mexican descent 154 San Gabriel Valley There is a large Mexican American community in San Gabriel Valley cities such as West Covina 155 156 Inland Empire California Riverside San Bernardino Counties and the cities of that namesake About a third of the population are of Mexican descent Including Pomona and Romoland with high Mexican percentages Riverside 157 Adelanto Hesperia Victorville and Apple Valley in the Victor Valley 158 Rialto and San Bernardino California 157 159 Redlands 160 Indio 157 and Coachella California primarily Mexican American 161 Santa Ana 78 Latino with the majority being of Mexican descent 162 Southern California is the highest densely populated Mexican American region but by areas of percentage it is South Texas San Diego California slightly less than one third of the city s population is Latino primarily Mexican American however this percentage is the lowest of any significant border city Imperial Valley region Imperial County California and Yuma Arizona San Francisco Bay Area also with over one million Latinos many of whom are Mexican Americans both US born and foreign born see also Oakland about 10 20 Latino and San Francisco the Mission District section the city is 10 20 Latino East Palo Alto Half Moon Bay North Fair Oaks Redwood City Oakland California s third largest Mexican American city by percentage over 25 after Long Beach about 30 Many live in the Fruitvale district San Jose Nearly one third of the city s population is Mexican American or of Latino origin San Jose has the largest Mexican American population within the Bay Area South San Francisco Central Valley of California both the Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys have majority Mexican American communities Examples being Sacramento and Fresno and the heaviest concentrations in Kern County California around Bakersfield Arizona Edit Phoenix Fifth largest Mexican American population Tucson 30 of the almost 1 million people in the metro area 163 Texas Edit Dallas Fort Worth Area Fifth largest Mexican American population and over 1 5 million Mexicans in the Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex third largest foreign born Mexican population in the US per MSA San Antonio Texas Over half of the population in the city proper 53 2 705 530 and second largest Mexican population of any city in the US 157 Laredo The largest Mexican American community bordering Nuevo Laredo Mexico The majority of Laredo speaks Spanish as their first language Houston Texas Third largest Mexican ancestry community in the United States 164 San Angelo with other areas of West Texas home to Tejanos El Paso Largest Mexican American community bordering a state of Mexico South Texas Heavily populated by Mexican Americans who are the ethnic majority in a region spanning from Laredo to Corpus Christi to Brownsville Harlingen Texas The Latino population of Harlingen is 72 due to its proximity to the Rio Grande Mexico border 165 Illinois Edit Illinois As of 2021 the state has 1 76 million people of full or partial Mexican ancestry 13 9 of the state population 166 Chicago metropolitan area As of 2021 nearly 1 69 million people of full or partial Mexican ancestry 17 8 of the metro population live in the Chicago metropolitan area 167 which includes Racine and Kenosha counties in Wisconsin and Lake and Porter counties in Indiana Cook County As of 2021 1 032 984 people of full or partial Mexican ancestry live in Cook County 20 0 of the county population the largest county in the state by population 168 Chicago As of 2021 571 577 people of full or partial Mexican ancestry live in Chicago proper 21 2 of the city population 169 Colorado Edit Denver Colorado has the eighth largest population of Latinos seventh highest percentage of Latinos fourth largest population of Mexican Americans and sixth highest percentage of Mexican Americans in the United States According to the 2010 census there are over 1 million Mexican Americans in Colorado 170 Over one third of the city s population is Mexican American or Latino as well as approximately one fourth of the entire Denver Metropolitan area About 17 of the cities population is foreign born mostly from Latin America Greeley Over one third of the city s population is Latino mostly Mexican American Garden City is Latino majority and Evans has a very large Latino population as well Southern Colorado is home to many communities of Latinos descended from Mexican settlers who arrived during Spanish colonial times Roughly half of Pueblo s population is Latino mostly Mexican American Many other towns in southern Colorado have high proportions of Mexican Americans La Junta Rocky Ford Las Animas Lamar Walsenburg and Trinidad all have large Mexican American communities San Luis Valley The San Luis Valley has many towns with large Mexican American populations Antonito Blanca Center Del Norte Fort Garland Monte Vista and Romeo are all Latino majority 171 Other states Edit Las Vegas Nevada 70 of Latinos that are eligible to vote in Nevada are Mexican 172 North Las Vegas 30 14 Mexican 173 174 The Yakima Valley and Tri Cities Washington This region of Washington contains many communities of Mexican American majority thanks to high demand for agricultural labor New York City Mexicans are the third largest Latino ethnic group after Puerto Ricans and Dominicans New York City s Mexican population ranked 11th among major American cities in 2000 at 186 872 175 Atlanta Atlanta has a sizable Mexican population Mexicans are the largest Latino ethnic group in Atlanta 176 Mexicans are concentrated in Gwinnett County 177 New Orleans Mexicans are one of the largest Latino groups in New Orleans following Hondurans 178 Kansas There is a large Mexican American presence in Kansas 179 Detroit In the early 1900s many Mexican American families moved to Michigan and Detroit There is a Mexican American community in Mexicantown 180 New Jersey The North Jersey region nicknamed Puebla Jersey by migrants is home to Mexican migrants and their descendants primarily from the states of Puebla and Oaxaca The largest Mexican community is found in the small city of Passaic where roughly a quarter of the city s population is of Mexican origin where Mexicans began to arrive in the 1970s to work in mills 181 182 Bridgeport and New Haven Connecticut have the 1st and 3rd largest Mexican populations in the New England region respectively in 2020 alongside Boston at 2 despite being much smaller cities The Mexican population of these respective cities began to grow in the 1990s from the tens into the hundreds to around 8 000 each by 2020 New Haven has thousands of migrants from Tlaxcala some of whom are reported Nahuatl speakers 183 where New Haven is the primary destination for migrants Mexicans are the second largest Latino group in both cities but in both they are heavily outnumbered by Puerto Ricans Bridgeport has the 7th largest Puerto Rican community in the US there they outnumber Mexicans roughly 4 1 there Mexicans are the largest groups in the West End and North Hollow census tracks of Bridgeport while in New Haven they are the largest national origin group in East Fair Haven 184 185 186 Other US destinations Edit Original Ninfa s on Navigation Boulevard established by Ninfa Laurenzo Major cities like Boise Idaho Detroit Michigan Milwaukee Wisconsin Portland Oregon Salt Lake City Utah and Seattle Washington have a large Mexican American population 187 US states by Mexican American population Edit State Territory MexicanAmericanPopulation 2018 188 Percentage Alabama 124 210 2 6 Alaska 28 049 3 8 Arizona 1 926 274 27 8 Arkansas 159 273 5 4 California 12 621 844 32 3 Colorado 869 149 15 8 Connecticut 57 383 1 6 Delaware 34 244 3 7 District of Columbia 14 146 1 6 Florida 713 518 3 5 Georgia 561 710 5 5 Hawaii 45 832 3 3 Idaho 181 185 10 8 Illinois 1 715 831 13 4 Indiana 333 219 5 1 Iowa 143 368 4 6 Kansas 278 213 9 6 Kentucky 89 217 2 1 Louisiana 93 750 2 1 Maine 6 251 0 5 Maryland 97 231 1 7 Massachusetts 47 911 0 7 Michigan 363 421 4 9 Minnesota 201 580 3 7 Mississippi 56 282 1 9 Missouri 172 055 2 9 Montana 27 510 2 7 Nebraska 150 424 7 9 Nevada 629 469 21 6 New Hampshire 8 686 0 7 New Jersey 230 875 2 6 New Mexico 658 516 31 5 New York 477 194 2 5 North Carolina 538 505 5 3 North Dakota 17 915 2 3 Ohio 200 060 1 8 Oklahoma 333 166 8 5 Oregon 431 169 10 6 Pennsylvania 152 537 1 2 Rhode Island 11 123 1 1 South Carolina 150 582 3 1 South Dakota 21 229 2 5 Tennessee 217 557 3 3 Texas 9 394 506 33 7 Utah 306 375 10 7 Vermont 3 335 0 6 Virginia 173 046 2 1 Washington 728 208 10 0 West Virginia 10 982 0 6 Wisconsin 278 789 4 9 Wyoming 44 704 7 7Total US 36 600 000 12 2Cities metro areas with the largest Mexican populations Edit Los Angeles Long Beach Anaheim CA Metro Area Chicago Naperville Elgin IL IN WI Metro Area Dallas Fort Worth Arlington TX Metro Area Houston The Woodlands Sugar Land TX Metro Area Riverside San Bernardino Ontario CA Metro Area Phoenix Mesa Chandler AZ Metro Area San Diego Chula Vista Carlsbad CA Metro Area New York Newark Jersey City NY NJ PA Metro Area San Francisco Oakland Berkeley CA Metro Area McAllen Edinburg Mission TX Metro Area 189 Health EditDiabetes Edit Francisco G Cigarroa Diabetes refers to a disease in which the body has an inefficiency of properly responding to insulin which then affects the levels of glucose The prevalence of diabetes in the United States is constantly rising Common types of Diabetes are type 1 and type 2 Type 2 is the more common type of diabetes among Mexican Americans and is constantly increasing due to poor diet habits 190 The increase of obesity results in an increase of type 2 diabetes among Mexican Americans in the United States Mexican American men have higher prevalence rates in comparison to non Latinos whites and blacks 191 The prevalence of diabetes increased from 8 9 in 1976 1980 to 12 3 in 1988 94 among adults aged 40 to 74 according to the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 1988 1994 191 In a 2014 study The US Census Bureau estimates that by 2050 one in three people living in the United States will be of Latino origin including Mexican Americans 192 Type 2 diabetes prevalence is rising due to many risk factors and there are still many cases of pre diabetes and undiagnosed diabetes due to lack of sources According to the US Department of Health and Human Services 2011 individuals of Mexican descent are 50 more likely to die from diabetes than their white counterparts 191 Notable people EditMain article List of Mexican AmericansSee also Edit United States portal Mexico portal Hispanic and Latino Americans portalMexicans Demographics of Mexico Indigenous Mexican Americans Mexico United States barrier Migrant deaths along the Mexico United States border American immigration to Mexico Mexico United States relations Hyphenated American Emigration from Mexico Mexican cuisine Tex Mex Mexican American cuisine History of Mexican Americans in Los Angeles History of Mexican Americans in Texas History of Mexican Americans in Dallas Fort Worth History of Mexican Americans in Houston History of Mexican Americans in Metro Detroit Mexicans in Chicago History of Mexican Americans in TucsonEthnic Melting pot metaphor for cultural fusion Indigenous peoples of the Americas White Hispanic and Latino Americans White Mexicans Olive skin Mestizo Bronze racial classification Brown racial classification La raza cosmica Afro MexicansPolitical Reconquista Mexico Cultural Chicanismo Chicano poetry List of Mexican American writers El Pueblo de Los Angeles Historical Monument Cholo subculture Film A Better Life Cesar Chavez film Fools Rush In 1997 film From Prada to Nada La Bamba film Lowriders film McFarland USA Spare Parts 2015 film Tortilla SoupReferences Edit a b Garcia Justin 2013 Mexican Americans Multicultural America A Multimedia Encyclopedia doi 10 4135 9781452276274 n570 ISBN 9781452216836 S2CID 153137775 B05006 PLACE OF BIRTH FOR THE FOREIGN BORN POPULATION IN THE UNITED STATES 2021 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau July 1 2021 Retrieved September 15 2022 a b B03001 HISPANIC OR LATINO ORIGIN BY SPECIFIC ORIGIN United States 2021 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau July 1 2021 Retrieved September 15 2022 Frazier John W Tettey Fio Eugene L Henry Norah F 29 December 2016 Race Ethnicity and Place in a Changing America Third Edition p 53 ISBN 9781438463292 Newby Rick 2004 The Rocky Mountain Region p 334 ISBN 9780313328176 Gutierrez Veronica F Wallace Steven P Castaneda Xochitl 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Era Wyoming History of Education Quarterly 61 4 392 422 doi 10 1017 heq 2021 37 S2CID 240357463 Garcia David 2018 Strategies of Segregation Race Residence and the Struggle for Educational Equality Oakland CA University of California Press 1930s Mexican Deportation Educator brings attention to historic period and its effect on her family Archived October 5 2006 at the Wayback Machine a b Counseling Kevin The Economy Archived September 2 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b Perez v Sharp 32 Cal 2d 711 Fri 10 01 1948 California Supreme Court Resources scocal stanford edu Retrieved 2019 10 05 Ressner Jeffrey May 29 2006 How Immigration is Rousing the Zealots Time Archived from the original on June 16 2006 Retrieved May 12 2010 Victims Fbi gov Retrieved 7 October 2017 FBI Statistics Show Anti Latino Hate Crimes on the Rise Democracy Now Retrieved 2014 01 06 Latino Communities of the Central Valley Population Families and Households PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 02 16 Retrieved 2008 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George J 2007 Mexican Immigration to the United States University of Chicago Press p 244 ISBN 978 0 226 06668 4 Mexican Immigration to the United States edited by George J Borjas page 252 retrieved March 20 2013 a b c d e f Nancy S Landale R Salvador Olopesa and Christina Bradatan Hispanic Families in the United States Family Structure and Process in an Era of Family change a b c James Franklin J and Eileen A Tynan Minorities in the Sunbelt New Jersey The State University of New Jersey 1984 a b Radio Southern California Public 2017 10 31 What Dodger Stadium looked like when it was Chavez Ravine Southern California Public Radio Retrieved 2019 10 05 a b Martin Michael E Residential Segregation Patterns of Latinos in the United States 1991 2000 New York Routledge 2007 ROYBAL Edward R US House of Representatives History Art amp Archives history house gov Retrieved 2019 10 05 a b c Ferg Cadima James A Black White and Brown Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund April 28 2008 Archived October 8 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b c White Michael J Bueker Catherine Glick Jennifer E August 2002 The Impact of Immigration on Residential Segregation Revisited a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The Chicano Moratorium Death of Ruben Salazar Valencia Richard R April 2002 Mexican Americans Don t Value Education On the Basis of the Myth Mythmaking and Debunking Journal of Latinos and Education 1 2 81 103 doi 10 1207 S1532771XJLE0102 2 S2CID 144594549 Kiyama Judy Marquez January 2011 Family Lessons and Funds of Knowledge College Going Paths in Mexican American Families Journal of Latinos and Education 10 1 23 42 doi 10 1080 15348431 2011 531656 hdl 1802 23012 S2CID 17247506 Espino Michelle M 2 April 2016 The Value of Education and Educacion Nurturing Mexican American Children s Educational Aspirations to the Doctorate Journal of Latinos and Education 15 2 73 90 doi 10 1080 15348431 2015 1066250 S2CID 146963763 Altschul I 1 September 2011 Parental Involvement and the Academic Achievement of Mexican American Youths What Kinds of Involvement in Youths Education Matter Most Social Work Research 35 3 159 170 doi 10 1093 swr 35 3 159 Keith Patricia B Lichtman Marilyn V 1994 Does parental involvement influence the academic achievement of Mexican American eighth graders Results from the National Education Longitudinal Study School Psychology Quarterly 9 4 256 273 doi 10 1037 h0088292 Carranza Francisco D You Sukkyung Chhuon Vichet Hudley Cynthia 22 June 2009 Mexican American adolescents academic achievement and aspirations the role of perceived parental educational involvement acculturation and self esteem Adolescence 44 174 313 334 PMID 19764269 Gale A207643292 INIST 21922379 Complete National Film Registry Listing National Film Preservation Board The Library of Congress Retrieved 2018 03 18 a b 2011 National Film Registry More Than a Box of Chocolates Library of Congress December 28 2011 Retrieved December 29 2011 U S Census website 29 November 2014 Retrieved 7 October 2017 Demographic Statistics for Montebello California Cities with the Highest Percentage of Mexicans in California Zip Atlas Latinos rising fortunes are epitomized in Downey Los Angeles Times 2015 08 05 Mexican Americans Leadership Ideology and Identity 1930 1960 Mexican American Baseball in the Central Coast p 89 a b c d Data Access and Dissemination Systems DADS American FactFinder Results census gov permanent dead link Cruz Rene Ray De La September 28 2017 Strength in numbers Hispanics now the majority in Inland Empire Daily Press Riverside California City of Arts amp Innovation at Home in Riverside Mexican Americans in Redlands 2012 Data Access and Dissemination Systems DADS American FactFinder Results census gov Archived from the original on 2020 02 12 Nagourney Adam Medina Jennifer October 11 2016 This City Is 78 Latino and the Face of a New California The New York Times American FactFinder Factfinder census gov Archived from the original on 2020 02 11 Retrieved 2014 01 06 Hispanic or Latino by Type 2019 Race and Ethnicity in Harlingen Texas Statistical Atlas B03001 HISPANIC OR LATINO ORIGIN BY SPECIFIC ORIGIN United States 2021 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates Chicago city Illinois U S Census Bureau July 1 2021 Retrieved September 15 2022 B03001 HISPANIC OR LATINO ORIGIN BY SPECIFIC ORIGIN United States 2021 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates Chicago Naperville Elgin IL IN WI Metro Area U S Census Bureau July 1 2021 Retrieved September 15 2022 B03001 HISPANIC OR LATINO ORIGIN BY SPECIFIC ORIGIN United States 2021 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates Cook County Illinois U S Census Bureau July 1 2021 Retrieved September 15 2022 B03001 HISPANIC OR LATINO ORIGIN BY SPECIFIC ORIGIN United States 2021 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates Chicago city Illinois U S Census Bureau July 1 2021 Retrieved September 15 2022 2010 Population by Race and Hispanic Origin PDF Dola colorado gov Archived from the original PDF on 19 September 2018 Retrieved 7 October 2017 San Luis Valley Statistical Profile PDF Scseed org Retrieved 7 October 2017 Pewresearch Latinos in the 2014 Election Nevada Cities with the Highest Percentage of Mexicans in Nevada Simich Jerry L Wright Thomas C 7 March 2005 The Peoples Of Las Vegas One City Many Faces ISBN 9780874176513 Mexicans Are Now New York City s Fastest Growing Ethnic Group Odem Mary Browne Irene 19 December 2011 Understanding the Diversity Of Atlanta s Latino Population Intersections of Race Ethnicity and Class Norteamerica Revista Academica del CISAN UNAM 6 doi 10 22201 cisan 24487228e 2011 3 147 inactive 31 December 2022 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of December 2022 link Mexicans A Glance at New Orleans Contemporary Hispanic and Latino Communities 2 October 2017 Mexican Americans in Kansas Mexicantown https www wsj com articles passaic puebla connection new jersey enclave rooted in one mexican state 1409965651 https www seattletimes com nation world new jersey city has mexican flavor of the state of puebla https www elalliance org languages nahuatl https www newhavenindependent org article tlaxcala dreams https cinycmaps com index php ancestry 2013 17 2014 18 top ahr https data census gov table q bridgeport connecticut amp g 160XX00US0952000 amp tid ACSDP5Y2020 DP05 Hispanic Population and Origin in Select U S Metropolitan Areas 2014 Pew Research Center Mexican American Population in the United States in 2018 Socialexplorer com Retrieved July 6 2020 Mexican Immigrants in the United States Seligman Rebecca Mendenhall Emily Valdovinos Maria D Fernandez Alicia Jacobs Elizabeth A March 2015 Self care and Subjectivity among Mexican Diabetes Patients in the United States Medical Anthropology Quarterly 29 1 61 79 doi 10 1111 maq 12107 ISSN 0745 5194 PMID 24942832 a b c Martorell Reynaldo 2004 12 15 Diabetes and Mexicans Why the Two Are Linked Preventing Chronic Disease 2 1 A04 ISSN 1545 1151 PMC 1323307 PMID 15670457 Drive American Diabetes Association 2451 Crystal Arlington Suite 900 Va 22202 1 800 Diabetes Diabetes Among Hispanics All Are Not Equal American Diabetes Association Archived from the original on 2018 12 10 Retrieved 2018 12 09 Bibliography further reading EditMain article Mexican American bibliography Englekirk Allan and Marguerite Marin Mexican Americans Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America edited by Thomas Riggs 3rd ed vol 3 Gale 2014 pp 195 217 online Gomez Laura Manifest Destinies The Making of the Mexican American Race New York UP 2007 ISBN 978 0 8147 3174 1 Gomez Quinones Juan and Irene Vasquez Making Aztlan Ideology and Culture of the Chicana and Chicano Movement 1966 1977 2014 Meier Matt S and Margo Gutierrez Encyclopedia of the Mexican American civil rights movement Greenwood 2000 online Quiroz Anthony ed Leaders of the Mexican American Generation Biographical Essays Boulder CO University Press of Colorado 2015 Orozco Cynthia E No Mexicans women or dogs allowed The rise of the Mexican American civil rights movement University of Texas Press 2010 online Rosales F Arturo Chicano The history of the Mexican American civil rights movement Arte Publico Press 1997 online Sanchez George I 2006 Ideology and Whiteness in the Making of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement 1930 1960 Journal of Southern History 72 3 569 604 doi 10 2307 27649149 JSTOR 27649149 External links EditMexican Americans at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Data from Wikidata California Ethnic and Multicultural Archives In the Chicano Latino Collections University of California Santa Barbara California Ethnic and Multicultural Archives Digital Chicano Art University of California Santa Barbara Calisphere gt California Cultures gt Hispanic Americans University of California System ImaginArte Interpreting and Re imaging Chican Art University of California Santa Barbara Mexican American News Network of the Mexican American Community Mexican Americans MSN Encarta Archived 2009 11 01 Think Mexican News Culture and Information on the Mexican Community Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mexican Americans amp oldid 1145953747, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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