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APPENDIX III. Recommended Readings
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- List of Abbreviations ix
- Preface xiii
- Acknowledgments xvii
- Sowing Seeds for Change symposium address 1
- Introduction 2
- The Virgin of Guadalupe, interview of Carmen Tomás 21
- CHAPTER 1. Making Home: Culture, Ethnicity, Mattern and Religion among Farmworkers in the Southeastern United States 22
- Sowing Seeds for Change symposium address 53
- CHAPTER 2. Layers of Loss: Migrants, Small Farmers, and Agribusiness 55
- Life on Easy Street 87
- CHAPTER 3. Standing Idly By: ‘‘Organized’’ Farmworkers in South Florida during the Depression and World War II 89
- Rifaré mi suerte/ I’ll Raffle My Luck interview of Humberto Zapata Alvizo 111
- CHAPTER 4. H-2A Guestworker Program: A Legacy of Importing Agricultural Labor 113
- Testimony at Hearing before the Commission on Agricultural Workers 137
- CHAPTER 5. Farmworker Exceptionalism under the Law: How the Legal System Contributes to Farmworker Poverty and Powerlessness 139
- Wells Farms 167
- The Conditions at the Camp Are Not Great, interview of Vanessa 168
- CHAPTER 6. Bitter Harvest: Housing Conditions of Migrant and Seasonal Farmworkers 169
- The History We Wrote This Summer 195
- CHAPTER 7. The Struggle for Health in Times of Plenty 198
- That Summer 219
- Bella Juventud/ Wonderful Youth 220
- CHAPTER 8. Understanding the Challenges and Potential of Migrant Students 222
- I Don’t Think People Give Up, interview of Sheila Payne 247
- CHAPTER 9. From Slavery to Cesar Chavez and Beyond: Farmworker Organizing in the United States 249
- Sowing Seeds for Change symposium address 277
- CONCLUSION. An Invocation to Act 278
- APPENDIX I. Developing a Syllabus on Farmworker Advocacy 299
- APPENDIX II. Farmworker-Related Organizations and Agencies 307
- APPENDIX III. Recommended Readings 313
- Works Cited 317
- Contributors 331
- Index 333
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- List of Abbreviations ix
- Preface xiii
- Acknowledgments xvii
- Sowing Seeds for Change symposium address 1
- Introduction 2
- The Virgin of Guadalupe, interview of Carmen Tomás 21
- CHAPTER 1. Making Home: Culture, Ethnicity, Mattern and Religion among Farmworkers in the Southeastern United States 22
- Sowing Seeds for Change symposium address 53
- CHAPTER 2. Layers of Loss: Migrants, Small Farmers, and Agribusiness 55
- Life on Easy Street 87
- CHAPTER 3. Standing Idly By: ‘‘Organized’’ Farmworkers in South Florida during the Depression and World War II 89
- Rifaré mi suerte/ I’ll Raffle My Luck interview of Humberto Zapata Alvizo 111
- CHAPTER 4. H-2A Guestworker Program: A Legacy of Importing Agricultural Labor 113
- Testimony at Hearing before the Commission on Agricultural Workers 137
- CHAPTER 5. Farmworker Exceptionalism under the Law: How the Legal System Contributes to Farmworker Poverty and Powerlessness 139
- Wells Farms 167
- The Conditions at the Camp Are Not Great, interview of Vanessa 168
- CHAPTER 6. Bitter Harvest: Housing Conditions of Migrant and Seasonal Farmworkers 169
- The History We Wrote This Summer 195
- CHAPTER 7. The Struggle for Health in Times of Plenty 198
- That Summer 219
- Bella Juventud/ Wonderful Youth 220
- CHAPTER 8. Understanding the Challenges and Potential of Migrant Students 222
- I Don’t Think People Give Up, interview of Sheila Payne 247
- CHAPTER 9. From Slavery to Cesar Chavez and Beyond: Farmworker Organizing in the United States 249
- Sowing Seeds for Change symposium address 277
- CONCLUSION. An Invocation to Act 278
- APPENDIX I. Developing a Syllabus on Farmworker Advocacy 299
- APPENDIX II. Farmworker-Related Organizations and Agencies 307
- APPENDIX III. Recommended Readings 313
- Works Cited 317
- Contributors 331
- Index 333