The long haul in mexican trucking traversing the borderlands of the north and the south
Northern Mexican truckers use personal networks, patronage, and trust to organize their long-haul produce trade, in contrast to more corporative styles and organization of highland Maya truckers in Mexico's south, who also ship to and from Mexico's central produce markets. Yet both groups of entrepreneurs traverse their respective borderlands into alien markets (across the U.S.-Mexico border into Los Angeles, or into Mexican national markets formerly closed to Mayas). In doing so, both elaborate their distinctive style of trucking as ethnic enterprise, contributing to the ethnic differentiation of borderland zones under contemporary capitalism.
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Texto biblioteca |
Language: | eng |
Subjects: | Rutas comerciales, Transporte por carretera, Identidad cultural, Identidad colectiva, Artfrosur, |
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