Descriptor
Farm Labor | 2 |
Labor Supply | 2 |
Agriculture | 1 |
Automation | 1 |
Braceros | 1 |
Economic Factors | 1 |
Foreign Workers | 1 |
Illegal Immigrants | 1 |
Immigrants | 1 |
Japanese Americans | 1 |
Labor Problems | 1 |
More ▼ |
Source
AGENDA | 1 |
Amerasia Journal | 1 |
Author
Sawada, Mitziko | 1 |
Verdugo, Naomi | 1 |
Publication Type
Historical Materials | 2 |
Journal Articles | 2 |
Reports - Descriptive | 2 |
Education Level
Audience
Location
California | 1 |
Mexico | 1 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating

Sawada, Mitziko – Amerasia Journal, 1987
Seabrook Farms was most prosperous during World War II when Japanese Americans were recruited from concentration camps to alleviate its labor shortage. As the camps closed, former detainees became full-time workers in spite of some exploitation. It was a place for these families to live and work before returning to the West Coast. (VM)
Descriptors: Farm Labor, Japanese Americans, Labor Problems, Labor Supply
Verdugo, Naomi – AGENDA, 1981
Briefly describes the history of Mexican migration to the United States; analyzes the impact--its benefits and drawbacks--of the Bracero Program (Mexican National Program) on the agricultural industry (especially in California), the U.S. economy and the braceros themselves; considers the althernatives to the Bracero Program. (Author)
Descriptors: Agriculture, Automation, Braceros, Economic Factors