Intinerant workers.
Migrant workers were also sometimes called "guest workers" or "temporary workers."
Steinbeck traveled with migrant workers, lived in labor camps, and conducted interviews to learn about their experiences. He also observed the living and working conditions of the migrant workers firsthand to accurately depict their struggles in his writing.
He wrote articles about migrant farmers.
Mexican migrant workers lived in crowded and filthy barrios. They also faced low wages and poor education. Medical care was a rarity, too. Mexican migrant workers, additionally, had the resentment of American workers and taxpayers. Lastly, they worked outdoors, in all weather, and worked bent-over, picking crops all day.
Mexican migrant workers lived in crowded and filthy barrios. They also faced low wages and poor education. Medical care was a rarity, too. Mexican migrant workers, additionally, had the resentment of American workers and taxpayers. Lastly, they worked outdoors, in all weather, and worked bent-over, picking crops all day.
The UFW helped migrant farm workers by providing them with a means to collectively bargain for better working conditions and wages. It also allowed them to get better health care and living conditions.
They live underneath your house growing crops. they also suck a lot of penis
Migrant workers suffered quite a bit in the Great Depression. They did not have fixed employment when the Depression began, so they had even less chance of finding a fixed position during the Depression. In addition, people who had been laid off due to the Depression often became migrant workers, meaning there was a problem with homeless men and families moving throughout America looking for jobs. The increase in migrant workers made it even harder for these people to find jobs, since the additional people created more competition and also created new stereotypes of migrant workers that weren't desirable, so it was less likely they would be hired.
John Steinbeck traveled to Oklahoma to research the Dust Bowl conditions and interviewed migrant workers to understand their experiences. He also spent time in migrant camps and government-run camps to gain insight into the living conditions of the workers. Additionally, he read government reports and articles to further educate himself on the social and economic issues of the time.
Pros: Migrant workers contribute to the economy by filling labor gaps, bring diverse skills and perspectives to the workforce, and often take on jobs that local workers are not willing to do. Cons: Migrant workers may face exploitation, poor working conditions, and limited legal protections. They can also put pressure on local job markets and social services.
Migrant workers do mostly menial labor in low-paying jobs. A large majority of migrants follow the planting season, traveling from state to state to harvesy crops, plant seeds, buck barley, etc. Another large majority of migrant workers work menial jobs in all phases of construction. The workers are not unionized, so they are paid less than union workers despite experience or skills. Because of the seasonal nature of harbesting crops, and construction, many migrant workers are unemployed for over half of the year, or find local temporary jobs. Some workers from Mexico return to their homes during the "off season".
In the US they follow seasonal work mostly agriculture like harvesting fruit and vegetables but also firefighting in the west, among other things.
Migrant workers leave their lives behind. This involves family, friends, original jobs. For men and women it changes their social set-up. Sometimes they are forced to give up their lives, like the migrant workers in South Africa that went to work on the mines. They went to live in Johanneburg to work on the gold mines. Ths was because of heavy taxation on their farms. they have no contact with woman and even if they are married they fall in the trap of being involved with other women and as such break up their homes. in many instances thay stopped sending money home that was vital to survival for the family left behind. the woman left nehind also have to take on new roles in the family. They are now the only parental figure in the house. Migrants workers tended to spend lots of time drinking and fall in the drug trap. Today they become HIV+ because of poor choices and when they go home they infect their wives.