Sweatshop Workers and Domestic Ideologies: Dominican Women in New York's Apparel Industry
- 1 March 1994
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
- Vol. 18 (1), 127-142
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2427.1994.tb00254.x
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Making Sense of Settlement: Class Transformation, Cultural Struggle, and Transnationalism among Mexican Migrants in the United StatesAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1992
- eloquent knowledge: Lesotho migrants' songs and the anthropology of experienceAmerican Ethnologist, 1987
- the madman and the migrant: work and labor in the historical consciousness of a South African peopleAmerican Ethnologist, 1987
- Immigrant Economic Adjustment and Family Organization: The Cuban Success Story ReexaminedPublished by JSTOR ,1986
- Notes on the Incorporation of Third World Women into Wage-Labor Through Immigration and Off-Shore ProductionPublished by JSTOR ,1984
- Migration, Crisis and Theoretical ConflictPublished by JSTOR ,1982
- International Migration from the Dominican Republic: Findings from a National SurveyPublished by JSTOR ,1979
- The Functions and Reproduction of Migrant Labor: Comparative Material from Southern Africa and the United StatesAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1976
- The evolution of the familyPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1972
- The Cult of True Womanhood: 1820-1860American Quarterly, 1966