Presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Cornell University Press
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
22. Mrs. Clinton Will Never See Me Working There: The Offshore Assembly Industry
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents ix
- Foreword xi
- Acknowledgments xv
- Introduction: Thirty-Five Seconds 1
- 1. We Don’t Have Enough Water to Make Tears: Surviving the Earthquake, or Not 12
- 2. What We Have, We Share: Solidarity Undergirds Rescue and Relief 19
- 3. Pearl of the Antilles: The Political Economy of Peril 27
- 4. Maroon Man: Social Movements throughout History 32
- 5. We Will Carry You On: The Women’s Movement 41
- 6. You Can’t Eat Okra with One Finger: Community-Run Humanitarian Aid 49
- 7. Fragile as a Crystal (Tales from Three Months Out) 57
- 8. Children of the Land: Small Farmers and Agriculture 63
- 9. Grains and Guns: Foreign Aid and Reconstruction 72
- 10. The Ones Who Must Decide: Social Movements in the Reconstruction 86
- 11. Our Bodies Are Shaking Now: Violence against Girls and Women 93
- 12. The Creole Connection: People-to-People Aid and Solidarity across Borders 102
- 13. We’ve Lost the Battle, but We Haven’t Lost the War (Tales from Six Months Out) 112
- 14. Social Fault Lines: Class and Catastrophe 118
- 15. Monsanto Seeds, Miami Rice: The Politics of Food Aid and Trade 124
- 16. Home: From Tent Camp to Community 131
- 17. For Want of Twenty Cents: Children’s Rights and Protection 140
- 18. The Super Bowl of Disasters: Profiting from Crisis 146
- 19. The Commonplace amid the Catastrophic (Tales from Nine Months Out) 154
- 20. Beyond Medical Care: The Health of the Nation 159
- 21. Hold Strong: The Pros and Pitfalls of Resilience 168
- 22. Mrs. Clinton Will Never See Me Working There: The Offshore Assembly Industry 176
- 23. The Central Pillar: Peasant Women 184
- 24. Elections (In the Time of Cholera) 190
- 25. We Will Never Fall Asleep Forgetting (Tales from Twelve Months Out) 197
- Epilogue: Bringing It Back Home 201
- Notes 207
- Index 225
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents ix
- Foreword xi
- Acknowledgments xv
- Introduction: Thirty-Five Seconds 1
- 1. We Don’t Have Enough Water to Make Tears: Surviving the Earthquake, or Not 12
- 2. What We Have, We Share: Solidarity Undergirds Rescue and Relief 19
- 3. Pearl of the Antilles: The Political Economy of Peril 27
- 4. Maroon Man: Social Movements throughout History 32
- 5. We Will Carry You On: The Women’s Movement 41
- 6. You Can’t Eat Okra with One Finger: Community-Run Humanitarian Aid 49
- 7. Fragile as a Crystal (Tales from Three Months Out) 57
- 8. Children of the Land: Small Farmers and Agriculture 63
- 9. Grains and Guns: Foreign Aid and Reconstruction 72
- 10. The Ones Who Must Decide: Social Movements in the Reconstruction 86
- 11. Our Bodies Are Shaking Now: Violence against Girls and Women 93
- 12. The Creole Connection: People-to-People Aid and Solidarity across Borders 102
- 13. We’ve Lost the Battle, but We Haven’t Lost the War (Tales from Six Months Out) 112
- 14. Social Fault Lines: Class and Catastrophe 118
- 15. Monsanto Seeds, Miami Rice: The Politics of Food Aid and Trade 124
- 16. Home: From Tent Camp to Community 131
- 17. For Want of Twenty Cents: Children’s Rights and Protection 140
- 18. The Super Bowl of Disasters: Profiting from Crisis 146
- 19. The Commonplace amid the Catastrophic (Tales from Nine Months Out) 154
- 20. Beyond Medical Care: The Health of the Nation 159
- 21. Hold Strong: The Pros and Pitfalls of Resilience 168
- 22. Mrs. Clinton Will Never See Me Working There: The Offshore Assembly Industry 176
- 23. The Central Pillar: Peasant Women 184
- 24. Elections (In the Time of Cholera) 190
- 25. We Will Never Fall Asleep Forgetting (Tales from Twelve Months Out) 197
- Epilogue: Bringing It Back Home 201
- Notes 207
- Index 225