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630 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 6 (2010)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0630 and id is 1 raw text is: INTRODUCTION
Migration in
the Americas:
Mexico and
Latin America
in Comparative
Context
By
KATHARINE M. DONATO,
JONATHAN HISKEY,
JORGE DURAND,
and
DOUGLAS S. MASSEY

Because Mexico-U.S. migration repre-
sents the largest sustained migratory
flow between two nations worldwide, much of
the theoretical and empirical work on migra-
tion in the Americas has focused on this
single case. Yet in the past few decades, migra-
tion has emerged as a critical issue across all
nations in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Indeed, over the past fifteen years, this region
has changed its historical position from a net
migrant-receiving region to one of the leading
sending areas of the world.
In this volume, we offer the first systematic
assessment of Latin American migration pat-
terns using ongoing research on the Mexican
case as a basis for comparison. We include work
by leading scholars of migration who draw on a
common source of comparable data. Our spe-
cific purpose is to determine whether and how
Mexican migration is similar to or different from
migration in other countries of the hemisphere.
The analyses are comparative and based on data
from the Mexican Migration Project (MMP)
and the Latin American Migration Project
(LAMP), which together offer the most com-
prehensive and reliable source of data on migra-
tion from Latin America and the Caribbean.
Each chapter examines specific propositions
or findings derived from the Mexican case that
have not yet been tested for other Latin
American or Caribbean nations. Work from
Mexico has now produced a fairly conven-
tional account of migration and settlement in
the United States, but we know very little about
how Mexican patterns generalize to other migra-
tory flows in the region. A major shortcoming
of prior research is its overreliance on data
from just one country.
To the extent that other countries have been
studied, most of the research to date has been
conducted on a case-by-case basis rather than
comparatively. As a result, conclusions about
DOI: 10.1177/0002716210368101

ANNALS, AAPSS, 630, July 2010

6

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