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[阅读小分队] 【揽瓜阁 外刊精读7.0】Day10 2021.04.21【社会科学-移民、行为研究】

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发表于 2021-4-20 22:04:23 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |正序浏览 |阅读模式
  揽瓜阁俱乐部第七期
  Day10 2021.04.21

【社会科学-移民】The Pull of El Norte - More Mexicans are crossing the border into the U.S., reversing a trend of recent years
(Bloomberg -1105 字 长精读)

Swelling numbers of Mexicans are heading north across the border, propelled by a deep recession at home and drawn by the promise of a stimulus fueled resurgence in the U.S.

Apprehensions at the southern U.S. border of working-age Mexicans traveling without children have more than doubled since October, to about 40,000 a month, from an average of fewer than 16,000 a month during the previous two years, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection. At this pace, 2021 could see the most apprehensions of Mexicans in a decade.

The influx has been largely ignored so far, as the Biden administration struggles with a steep rise in the number of unaccompanied children and families from Central America seeking asylum. Most Mexicans caught at the border are adults traveling without children. The number of repeat attempts at crossing is up sharply from previous years, largely because of a change in U.S. policy last year that resulted in migrants often being expelled within hours of being apprehended instead of being formally deported.

From a high point in the late 1990s and early 2000s, apprehensions of Mexicans at the U.S. border declined steeply as opportunities back home improved, families became smaller financial support from those settled abroad grew, and crossings became more dangerous and costly. But they began to climb back in 2018, the year President Andrés Manuel López Obrador took office and economic growth began to stagnate.

Then the coronavirus crisis hit, crippling the economy. The vast majority of Mexicans who lost their livelihoods in the past year didn’t have unemployment programs for support. And López Obrador has refused to fund a major fiscal stimulus, arguing that past bailouts benefited only the elite. Growth in the U.S. has rebounded more quickly, thanks in part to large injections of government aid, including enhanced jobless benefits.

These divergent realities have led a new generation of Mexicans to weigh the painful decision to leave home and family behind. “What drives migration is relative conditions between Mexico and the United States,” says Brian Cadena, an economist at the University of Colorado at Boulder. “It is not just booms that matter, it is also being hit less hard by a similar shock. If the U.S. is weathering the pandemic relatively well in terms of what the labor market looks like, that is going to continue to drive migration.” Both of José Granadino’s sons departed for the U.S. in recent months. Ramiro, 20, was helping pay for his agronomy degree by working as a sound engineer for events around the family’s home near Ixmiquilpan, about 70 miles north of Mexico City. But the pandemic killed the quinceañera and wedding party business. Meanwhile, his uncles in Oklahoma told him there was plenty of work north of the border. “He started to get desperate,” says Granadino, who went to Florida when he was just 16. “He said, ‘I want to improve myself, I want to do something.’”

In October, Ramiro set off for the U.S., braving a 10-day journey through the Texan desert. Granadino’s 23-year-old son, Victor, followed a month later. The brothers are now working double shifts at bakeries and restaurants in Tulsa.

“Every time there is an economic crisis in the United States, undocumented workers play a key part in the recovery because they are the cheapest to hire and are willing to work in the most adverse conditions,” says Jorge Santibañez, president of the Mexa Institute, based in Washington, D.C., which studies Mexican communities in the U.S.

Ixmiquilpan has been transformed by successive waves of emigration, starting in the 1980s. Thousand of migrants from the region have settled around Clearwater, Fla. Many stayed in the U.S. only five or 10 years, long enough to save money to build their own house in Mexico, buy a truck and a tractor, or start a business. Others stayed, leaving rocky fields at home dotted with half-finished or unoccupied U.S.-style dwellings built with money sent home. Remittances to Ixmiquilpan, mainly from the diaspora, totaled $129 million last year, more than 10 times the municipal budget.

The pandemic hit as many children of the first migrant generation were coming of age. Benigno Ñonthe’s youngest son, Lauro, finished high school and left four months ago. Ñonthe says the boy liked to watch internet videos about the rich and famous. He read Henry Ford’s autobiography and personal finance bestsellers like Rich Dad, Poor Dad, and idolized Michael Jordan and Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim. Lauro’s older siblings had all managed to secure professional jobs in Mexico, but Ñonthe’s youngest told him, “You only go to school to become an employee.”

Ñonthe, who bought a tractor with the money he earned in Florida years ago, warned his son of the risks involved, but he couldn’t dissuade him. “Sometimes you have to let the fear go,” he says. “When he returns, he will have a lot to tell.”

He isn’t even sure which state Lauro is living in, but says he’s found plenty of work in construction. The industry, which relies heavily on unauthorized migrants, has fared better than many others. While nonfarm employment fell about 6% from February 2020 to February 2021, construction employment fell only 3.8%.

Republicans have seized on immigration and asylum as issues that could win them back seats in Congress in next year’s midterm elections. Members of the party have said Biden created a crisis by easing Trump’s rules and using more welcoming rhetoric—even though most of the previous administration’s policies remain in place. On March 23 senior U.S. officials met with Mexican Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard to discuss how to defuse what some are calling a humanitarian crisis.

Santibañez, of the Mexa Institute, says it will be difficult to prevent Mexicans from emigrating as long as demand for labor that’s “diligent, cheap, and available” continues to build north of the border. “Businesses that are trying to recover say to the cook, the handyman, or a construction worker, ‘Get me a cousin of yours or a brother,’ ” he says. “That’s what gets people to go.”

In Mexico, Fabián Morales Marchán, head of Guerrero state’s office for migrant issues, says he doesn’t have data to confirm that migration is picking up. But he points to a morbid marker: In the past three months alone, the bodies of five migrants from his state, all of whom died near the U.S.-Mexico border, were sent home. “In Mexico there’s not any help from governments, which means that the situation in places like Guerrero, or in Mexico more generally, has been far worse than in the U.S.,” he says. “People have had to find a way to help their families.”


【社会科学-行为研究】R model
( WSY -635 字 长精读)


【笔记格式要求】
同学们精读这 2 篇文章并进行笔记打卡

精读笔记格式要求:
1.总结文章中心大意
2.总结分论点或每段段落大意
3.摘抄印象深刻或者觉得优美的句子
4.总结文章中的生词
5.记录阅读时间、总结时间、总时间

这里也给大家三点学习小建议哦~
精读:如遇到读不懂的复杂句,建议找出句子主干,分析句子成分,也可以尝试翻译句子来帮助理解~


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49#
发表于 2021-11-2 20:41:44 | 只看该作者
1.越来越多墨西哥人进入美国,
2.工作年龄的墨西哥人是之前的两倍
3.墨西哥人的流入目前被忽略,因为拜登忙于处理美国中部没有陪伴的孩子的数量急剧增长问题。由于去年政策的变化,流入的墨西哥人急剧增加,大部分都是没有携带孩子的成年人,经常被赶出去而不是正式通知。
4.从边境进入美国的墨西哥人在1990年末达到顶峰,后来因为政策的改变,移民定居的墨西哥人受到更小的资金支持以及越境变得更危险和花费更高。但是由于去年墨西哥新总统上任,经济变得稳定,越境的墨西哥人逐渐增加。
5.疫情使经济波动。主要的墨西哥人在美国得不到失业补助。墨西哥总统也拒绝提供财政刺激。美国的增加回弹的更快,归因于大量的政府补助和失业补贴。
6.让墨西哥人摇摆的是墨西哥和美国的相关情况。美国拥有更好地就业机会。
7.R出发去美国,V一个月猴也去了。两兄弟在烘焙店和餐馆工作。
8.每当美国有经济危机,发挥最大作用的是墨西哥人,他们最希望得到工作以最低的价格在最差的条件。
9.一个城市被连续的移民浪潮改变。墨西哥人在这里工作5年或10年,然后回墨西哥建房子,买车。另一些墨西哥人在此定居,留下半装修的美国式房屋。
10.疫情冲击伴随着很多第一代移民的孩子到了年级。BN的最年轻的儿子,受到一些名人的影响,读完高中就离开了。认为继续上学只能打工。
11.N警告了他的儿子现在的风险,但他不能说服他。
12.N不确定儿子在哪个州,只知道他找到了很多跟建设有关的工作。建设行业比其他工资要高,当非农场就业率降低了6%,建设就业率只降低了3%。
13.共和党重新赢回了很多国会的席位因为移民和asylum的问题。共和党的成员说拜登通过放松特朗普的政策和欢迎的辞令创造了一个危机,尽管大多数之前的行政政策仍然有效。美国官员和墨西哥秘书见面讨论如何化解一个称为人类危机。
14.S认为很难去阻止墨西哥人移民只要勤奋、便宜、可得的劳动力的需求持续建设北部边境。
15.墨西哥政府没有帮助人民,人们需要找一个方式去帮助他们的家庭。
48#
发表于 2021-8-31 12:01:57 | 只看该作者
wsy7.0 最后一天结束!继续往前补作业

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47#
发表于 2021-5-5 11:32:54 | 只看该作者
奇怪看不到第二篇
46#
发表于 2021-4-23 17:46:51 | 只看该作者
7.0 完结散花,太不容易了

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45#
发表于 2021-4-23 16:27:40 | 只看该作者
day10 task2 补卡

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44#
发表于 2021-4-22 11:36:27 | 只看该作者
第一篇【结构】
墨西哥移民潮
分别论述现象:家乡不好美国好,移民增;原因:新总统经济停滞,年轻人离开家;疫情到来后的情况;最后墨西哥移民的政治意义:政府利用移民宽松来获得自己的政治地位,一定程度助长移民。
第二篇【结构】
1-2 做自行证实的有益的事 see for yourself (实践出真知?) vs replicable
3-4 可复制性被人类忽略,现象解释:一是nervous系统的自设,二是文化&“h指标”让学者发表有争议的不可复制信息来增加impact factor
5 以上,为何不也出一个“r指标”来鼓励复制呢?r指标可能低于h指标,但是r能代表研究质量,反对对出版复制性的偏见。
6 “r指标”在非科学领域更有用。科学家知道重复才是途径,相反外行总是惊叹于反直觉的发现。r能帮助让人们注意累计的贡献,比如:持续的改进健康,教育,抑制暴力等。还有最大化个人习惯。
7 继续延伸r的重要意义需要被加强。水滴石穿?r应用于policy和选人。
【单词】
conduce 有益 有贡献于
credo 信条
replicable 可复制性
fixation 固化 别忘了还有“注视”的意思 fixation on change 专注于变化
novelty 新颖(原创)
pounding 重击 ecstasy 入迷 狂喜
flickers 灯光闪烁摇曳
consign 丢弃
eminence 卓越 显赫
index的复数 indices
intuit 凭直觉知道
pan out 自己泛出水面
media filtered 媒体过滤过的
laypeople 外行
denigrate 诋毁
43#
发表于 2021-4-22 05:35:57 | 只看该作者
【社会科学-行为研究】R model
( WSY -635 字 长精读)
1.        总结文章中心大意
R model的必要性
2.        总结分论点或每段段落大意
一件事情重复做的价值?从发明到健身,工作等?没太看懂。
3.摘抄印象深刻或者觉得优美的句子
“See for yourself”is an unspoken credo of science.
4.总结文章中的生词
Buddha佛陀   credo信条   explicitly明确的  flicker  pounding重击   ecstasy狂喜  fixate痴迷   disastrous灾难性的  greenhouse gas n. 二氧化碳、甲烷等导致温室效应的气体 consign委托  indice指数  combat反对  cataclysmic灾难性的  laypeople外行  denigrate诋毁
5.记录阅读时间、总结时间、总时间
Totally 32m( skimming 6 m,精读和笔记单词等26m)
42#
发表于 2021-4-22 04:28:03 | 只看该作者
Day10 打卡!

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41#
发表于 2021-4-22 03:08:31 | 只看该作者
七 Day10打卡

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