The Right to Stay Home:
How US Policy Drives Mexican Migration
by David Bacon

Beacon Press
Publication Date: September 10, 2013
Hardcover: 978-0-8070-0161-5; E-book: 978-0-8070-0162-2



More than 25 years since the last major revision 
of national immigration policy, comprehensive 
reform is now being debated in Congress.  Eleven 
million undocumented immigrants living and 
working in the U.S. hope it will lead to legal 
status, but many fear it will also increase the 
criminalization of migrant status and vastly 
expand "guest worker" contract labor programs.  

Now, in The Right to Stay Home: How US Policy 
Drives Mexican Migration, investigative reporter 
David Bacon exposes the way globalization and 
U.S. policy fuel the forces that drive Mexican 
migrants across the border. Through painstaking 
analysis and the voices of migrants themselves, 
Bacon reveals that the decision to come to the 
U.S. is rarely voluntary. Instead, the poverty 
that displaces indigenous communities across 
Mexico is the brutal consequence of 
globalization, as local economies crumble from 
the impact of trade agreements like NAFTA and 
economic reforms benefitting large corporations. 
Placing issues of displacement and human rights 
at the center of the U.S. immigration debate, 
Bacon examines the ways  U.S. policy has 
criminalized migrants  once they've been driven 
across the border.

Bacon scrutinizes one of the most controversial 
pieces of U.S. immigration policy, vastly 
expanded in current legislation: guest worker 
visas.  These visas grant the right to stay in 
the United States while working, but, he shows, 
lead to a corrupt system of recruitment and low 
wages, and the massive violation of labor and 
human rights.. Examining the roots of current 
systems in the Bracero Program, Bacon  explains: 
"No employer brings guest workers into the 
country to pay more than absolutely necessary." 
Despite these impacts, though, every major 
immigration reform bill proposed over the past 
decade has called for the expansion of guest 
worker programs-including the legislation 
currently on the table.

The book, however, also documents a reality that 
Bacon asserts should reframe the immigration 
debate in the U.S.  Indigenous Mexican 
communities that have been devastated by poverty 
and forced migration have organized a powerful 
new movement they call "the right to stay home." 
He traces the development of this movement, which 
seeks political democracy and economic 
development, in the states of Oaxaca and 
Veracruz, and presents the voices of its most 
eloquent advocates.  By looking at the roots of 
migration, U.S. policy can help to create a 
viable future in migrant-sending communities, 
while integrating and protecting the rights of 
immigrant families in the United States.

Bacon investigates a series of factors, generated 
by increasingly rapid globalization as well as 
U.S. policy toward immigration and Mexico's 
economy, that have made it impossible for 
countless Mexicans to survive at home, including:

o       Low wages and rural poverty: Bacon 
explains that high-paying jobs are evaporating 
across Mexico, replaced by low-paying ones: 95 
percent of the jobs created in Mexico in 2010 pay 
around $10 a day, he notes, and 53 million 
Mexicans (half of the country's population) lives 
in poverty.  Since  2006, less than one third of 
those needing work have been able to find it. 
Bacon explains that waves of Mexico's economic 
reforms decontrolled prices and ended consumer 
subsidies, creating favorable conditions for 
corporate investment but increasing poverty, 
especially in rural and indigenous communities.
o       The North American Free Trade Agreement 
(NAFTA): Bacon shows that NAFTA, introduced in 
1994, crippled Mexico's economic sovereignty and 
steered its national policy toward export-based 
economic development, favoring large corporations 
producing for export.  At the same time, massive 
imports devastated local Mexican economies, 
especially in farming, displacing millions of 
people.  Since 1994, the number of Mexicans 
living in the U.S. rose from 4.6 to over 12 
million - 11% of its population.
o       Tilting the Playing Field Against 
Workers: Industries expanding in Mexico because 
of NAFTA and corporate economic reforms, 
especially mining, have created hazardous 
conditions.  One 2006 coal mine explosion in 
Coahuila killed 65 miners.  When copper miners 
struck against levels of dust that cause 
silicosis, the Mexican government and one of the 
world's largest mining companies cooperated to 
bust their union.  The book analyzes three of the 
sharpest government anti-labor campaigns - the 
labor law reform, the firing of 44,000 electrical 
workers, and attacks on the miners.  Bacon show 
that this systematic suppression of labor rights 
in Mexico is a significant cause of migration to 
the U.S.

Bacon underscores that Mexican migrants, once 
forced from their native lands, are then 
criminalized after they settle in the U.S - 
caught between two nations where they are denied 
basic rights. He traces the rise in 
criminalization of immigrants under President 
George W. Bush, especially the enormous spread of 
factory raids.   Bacon then documents the 
continued criminalization of immigrants during 
President Barack Obama's first term in office, 
leading to the deportation of almost 400,000 
people per year and the massive expansion of 
detention centers.  The book focusses attention 
on one of the least visible parts of the 
administration's enforcement policy -- predatory 
I-9 audits and mass firings - the so-called 
"invisible raids."  It documents as well the rise 
of new enforcement programs, like Secure 
Communities, that draw local law authorities into 
the hunt for immigrants, and the notorious 
"Operation Streamline" court in Tucson. 

Bacon does more than highlight abuses, however. 
He draws a connection between the increase in 
enforcement and the increase in guest worker 
programs, intended, in the words of former 
Secretary of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff, 
"close the back door and open the front door." 
This connection, Bacon says, is the driver of 
much of current U.S. immigration policy.

Bacon says human rights,rather then 
criminalization or contract labor programs, 
should be the central issue in immigrant policy, 
a conclusion drawn from migrants' own words and 
experiences.  In their narratives throughout the 
book, they envision a world in which migrating 
for work and survival isn't a forced necessity-a 
world where, instead, they have the "right to 
stay home."  At the same time, they envision a 
world in which their rights as migrants are 
protected. "Migrants are human beings first, and 
their desire for community is as strong as the 
need to labor," Bacon writes. "Rather than reduce 
migrants to a factor of production, or a 
commodity to be exported and imported, migration 
policy must acknowledge migrants as human beings 
and address their dignity and human rights."



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Award-winning photojournalist and author David 
Bacon spent twenty years as a labor organizer. 
For the last two decades he has been a reporter 
and documentary photographer, and a longtime 
radio host. His previous books include The 
Children of NAFTA, Communities Without Borders, 
and Illegal People (Beacon, 2008). He is an 
associate editor at Pacific News Service and 
writes for TruthOut, the Nation, the American 
Prospect, the Progressive, and the San Francisco 
Chronicle, among other publications. As an 
immigrant rights activist he helped organize the 
Northern California Coalition for Immigrant 
Rights and the Labor Immigrant Organizers 
Network.  He belongs to the Pacific Media Workers 
Guild/CWA.



"David Bacon is the conscience of American 
journalism, an extraordinary social documentarian 
in the rugged humanist tradition of Dorothea 
Lange, Carey McWilliams and Ernesto Galarza."
-- Mike Davis, author of City of Quartz and No One is Illegal

"Bacon's bookŠ will help readers gain a 
significantly more sophisticated understanding of 
the context and on-the-ground reality of 
undocumented migrants in the 
U.S."                                                                 
- Publishers Weekly

"Combining evocative personal narratives with 
penetrating geopolitical analysis, this 
compelling study vividly reveals the devastating 
effects on Mexico of the global class war of the 
past decades, and their impact on the United 
States.  Perhaps the most striking demand of the 
victims is "the right to not migrate," the right 
to live with dignity and hope, bitterly attacked 
under the neoliberal version of globalization."
- Noam Chomsky

"Americans mostly think of immigration in terms 
of its impact on the U.S., and progressives 
mostly think of the rights of immigrants when 
they are in the U.S.  David Bacon's work reminds 
us that migration has a profound impact on the 
places migrants leave from, just as surely as it 
does on the places they go to.   He argues 
persuasively that the right NOT to migrate cannot 
be divorced from the immigrant rights.  The heart 
of David Bacon's whole body of work is in human 
stories, and this book validates its ideas with 
vivid testimony, in their own words, from those 
most affected."
-- John W. Wilhelm, President Emeritus, UNITEHERE!

"A must read for organizers,immigrant 
advocates,policy wonks and citizens who care 
about our history and values as a nation. This 
book puts a human face on the immigration debate, 
it's impact on people on both sides of the 
border, and the indispensable elements of real 
comprehensive immigration reform -- our 
understanding of how, why, who got us into this 
mess, and what we need to do to fix it."
- Eliseo Medina, International 
Secretary-Treasurer of the Service Employees 
International Union, and former vice-president of 
the United Farm Workers


Speaking schedule
David Bacon speaks about The Right to Stay Home 
and the need for human and labor rights in U.S. 
immigration policy.


September 10, 7 PM
        Books Inc., Opera Plaza, 601 Van Ness, San Francisco, CA

September 14, 6 PM
        UU Church of Concord, 274 Pleasant St., Concord, NH
        with the American Friends Service Committee

September 16, 7 PM
        Jamaica Plain Forum, First Church JP, 6 
Eliot St., Jamaica Plain, Boston, MA

September 17, 6-8 PM
        Graduate Center of CUNY at 34th Street and Fifth Avenue, New York, NY
        CUNY Institute of Mexican Studies

September 18, 5 PM
        NYU CLACS, 53 Washington Square South, Fl. 4W, New York, NY
        with North American Congress on Latin America

September 20, 12 PM
        AFL-CIO, 815 16th St., N.W. Washington, D.C

September 26, 7:30 PM
        Oakland Asian Cultural Center, 388 Ninth Street, Oakland, California
        With Isabel Garcia and Maru Mora Villapando, benefit for KPFA-FM

October 12, 10 AM
        Watsonville Council Chambers, Watsonville, CA
        Immigration forum with Assemblyman Luis 
Alejo, Democratic Dialogue Comm.

October 23, 7 PM
        University of Detroit Mercy, Life Sciences 113, Detroit, MI

October 24, 2:45 PM
        Wayne State University, Detroit, MI
        North American Labor Hisstory Conference

October 26, 7 PM
        Hilton Garden Inn, Emeryville, CA
        Convention, Democratic Socialists of America

November 7
        Rice University, Houston, TX



Other books by David Bacon

Illegal People -- How Globalization Creates 
Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants  (Beacon 
Press, 2008)
Recipient: C.L.R. James Award, best book of 2007-2008
http://www.beacon.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=2002

Communities Without Borders (Cornell University/ILR Press, 2006)
http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/cup_detail.taf?ti_id=4575

The Children of NAFTA, Labor Wars on the 
U.S./Mexico Border (University of California, 
2004)
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9989.html

For more articles and images, see  http://dbacon.igc.org
-- 
__________________________________

David Bacon, Photographs and Stories
http://dbacon.igc.org

__________________________________

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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