Jump to content

Immigration to Mexico

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Bulgarian Mexicans)

Immigrants at a naturalization ceremony in Los Pinos

Immigration to Mexico has been important in shaping the country's demographics. Since the early 16th century, with the arrival of the Spanish, Mexico has received immigrants from Europe, Africa, the Americas (particularly the United States and Central America), and Asia. Today, millions of their descendants still live in Mexico and can be found working in different professions and industries.

In the 20th century, Mexico also became a country of refuge, in particular by accepting individuals fleeing World War II in Europe, the Spanish Civil War, the Guatemalan Civil War and most recent repression in Nicaragua under Daniel Ortega regime.

The Constitution also states: "Every man has the right to enter the Republic, leave it, travel through its territory and change residence, without the need for a security letter, passport, safe-conduct or other similar requirements. The exercise of this right will be subordinate to the powers of the judicial authority, in cases of criminal or civil liability, and those of the administrative authority, as regards the limitations imposed by the laws on emigration, immigration, and general health of the Republic, or on pernicious foreigners residing in the country." Both Articles 33 and 9 of the Constitution limit foreigners' meddling in the country's political affairs.

Article 33 empowers the executive to make someone leave the national territory immediately and without the need for a prior trial of any foreigner whose permanence it deems inconvenient. However, it grants foreigners the same guarantees as nationals and so they are protected by the provisions of Article 4; the equality of men and women. Also, Article 1 prohibits any discrimination based on ethnic or national origin, gender, age, disabilities, social status, health conditions, religion, opinions, preferences, civil status, or any other status that violates human dignity and aims to nullify or impair the rights and freedoms of people.

It is important to include that Article 133 indicates that international treaties signed by the president and ratified by the Senate will be the supreme law of the entire union. For this reason, it should be remembered that Mexico is part of various international treaties that protect different protective rights of migrants, such as the Inter-American Convention on Human Rights, which in its Article 22 establishes the rights of movement and residence and stipulates, among others, the right to freely leave any country, including one's own, may be restricted by-laws only to protect national security, public order, or security, public morals or health, or the rights and freedoms of others. Mexico is part of the United Nations Convention on Migrant Workers, which broadly stipulates their rights and the corpus juris for the protection of the rights of women and girls.

Immigration in Mexico has not had an overwhelming impact on the total population, compared to that of other countries, but there has been a considerable increase in the foreign population since Mexico was consolidated as an independent nation. Its geographical position and for social, economic, climatological, cultural, and transit reasons, foreigners have stayed throughout the territory. Historically, the country has not sought mass immigration, but it has been the focus of attraction for more selective immigration to which is added an old tradition of political asylum for religious or ideological persecution. That makes intellectuals, scientists, and artists who reside in Mexico come from other nations and contribute in various scientific and artistic fields.

The history of Mexican immigration to the United States is best characterized as the movement of unskilled, manual laborers pushed northward mostly by poverty and unemployment and pulled into American labor markets with higher wages. Historically, most Mexicans have been economic immigrants seeking to improve their lives. In moments of civil strife, such as the Mexican Revolution (1910–1917) and the Cristero Revolt (1926–1929)[1]

According to the 2020 National Census, there are 1,212,252 foreign-born people registered with the government as living in Mexico.[2] Around 70% of foreigners living in Mexico come from neighboring countries (the United States and Guatemala), other important communities come mainly from Spanish-speaking nations, of which the Venezuelan, Colombian, Honduran, Cuban, Spanish, Salvadorian, and Argentinian communities stand out. The rest of immigration comes from other non-Hispanic nations.

History

[edit]

Colonial era, 1521–1821

[edit]

Mesoamerica—that is, Central and southern Mexico—, already had a large indigenous population at European contact in the early sixteenth century, which shaped migration patterns to the colony of New Spain. The Spanish crown restricted immigration to its overseas possessions to Catholics with "pure" ancestry (limpieza de sangre), that is, without the taint of Jewish or Muslim ancestors. Prospective immigrants had to obtain a license from the House of Trade in Seville, Spain, attesting to their religious status and ancestry. So-called New Christians, that is Jewish converts to Catholicism, were forbidden from immigrating for fear they had falsely claimed conversion and were in fact crypto-Jews passing as Christians.[3] During the period when Spain and Portugal had the same monarch (1580–1640), many Portuguese merchants immigrated to Mexico. Religious authorities suspected they were crypto-Jews. The Mexican Inquisition was established in 1571 and arrested, tried, and then turned those convicted over to civil authorities for corporal, sometimes capital, punishment in autos de fe.

Traditional china poblana attire for women, attributed to Mirra (Catarina de San Juan), a slave brought to Mexico from Kochi, India in the 17th century.

Early Spanish immigrants to Mexico included men who became crown or ecclesiastical officials, those with connections to the privileged group of conquerors who had access to indigenous labor and tribute via the encomienda, but also Spaniards who saw economic opportunity in Mexico. Not all Spaniards were of noble heritage (hidalgos); many were merchants and miners, as well as artisans of various types. Very few Spanish women immigrated from the conquest era onward, most usually because they joined family members who had already immigrated. Their presence helped consolidate the Spanish colony. Spaniards founded cities, sometimes on the sites of indigenous cities, the most prominent being Mexico City founded on the ruins of Aztec Tenochtitlan. Spaniards preferred living in cities and with so many immigrant artisans present from an early period, Spanish material culture was replicated in Mexico by tailors, leatherworkers, bakers, makers of weapons, construction workers, booksellers, and medical specialists (barber-surgeons). In 1550, of the 8,000 Spanish immigrants in Mexico City, around ten percent were artisans.[4][5] Some large-scale overseas traders based in Spain also had family members in charge of a business in Mexico itself.[6] A few particular towns in Spain sent immigrants to particular towns in Mexico, a notable example being Brihuega, Spain and Puebla, Mexico's second-largest town, both of which were textile-producing towns.[7]

18th century Casta painting, depicting a West African-Spanish family in colonial Mexico

African slaves were brought as auxiliaries to Spanish conquerors and settlers from the Spanish conquest onward, but as enslaved persons, they were different from European voluntary immigration.[8][9] Because Mexico had such a dense indigenous population, Spaniards imported fewer African slaves than they did to the Caribbean, where sugar cultivation necessitated a large labor force and indigenous laborers were absent.

Although most European immigrants were from various regions of Spain, there were Europeans with other origins including Italians, Flemish (most prominently Pedro de Gante), Greeks, French, and a few Irish (including William Lamport). Except for the Portuguese, many of these other Europeans assimilated into the larger Hispanic society.[10] Seventeenth-century English Dominican friar Thomas Gage spent a few years in central Mexico and Guatemala and wrote a colorful memoir of his time there, but returned to England and renounced Catholicism.[11] Asians arrived in Mexico via the Manila Galleon and the Pacific coast port of Acapulco. Filipinos, Chinese, and Japanese were part of this first wave, many of them enslaved.[12][13] The most famous of them was Catarina de San Juan, "la china poblana" (an Asian woman of Puebla), a slave woman who might have been of Mughal origin.[14]

Post-independence, 1821–1920

[edit]
Japanese immigrant workers at the mine of Cananea, Sonora in the 1910s. The Japanese, unlike other Asian immigrants, came from a politically strong nation and were seen as industrious, so they were exempt from the discriminatory immigration policies.

Even after Mexico achieved independence from Spain in 1821, it continued to exclude non-Catholics from immigrating until the liberal Reform. After the fall of the monarchy of Agustín de Iturbide in 1823, the newly established federal republic promulgated a new law regarding immigration, the General Colonization Law. The Spanish Crown's controls over foreigners doing business in Mexico were no longer in place, and some British businessmen took an interest in silver mining in northern Mexico.[15] The Mexican government sought to populate areas of the north as a buffer against indigenous attacks. The Mexican government gave a license to Stephen F. Austin to colonize areas in Texas, with the proviso that they be or become Catholics and learn Spanish, largely honored in the breach as more and more settlers arrived. Most settlers were from the slave-holding areas of the southern U.S. and brought their slaves with them to cultivate the rich soil of east Texas. The experiment in colonization in Texas went disastrously wrong for Mexico, with Anglo-Texans and some Mexican Texians rebelling against Mexico's central government and gaining de facto independence in 1836. However, Mexicans of various ideological stripes called for attracting immigrants to Mexico in the nineteenth century.

In the immediate aftermath of the American Civil War (1861–1865), a number of Southerners from the failed Confederate States of America moved to Mexico.[16] Another group migrating to Mexico were Mormons, who sought religious freedom to practice polygamy, and founded colonies in northern Mexico.[17][18] Many Mormons left Mexico at the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution.[19]

Second generation Armenian Mexican children in 1911

During the late nineteenth century when Mexican President Porfirio Díaz (r. 1876–1880, 1884–1911) pursued a policy of modernization and development, many from the U.S. settled in Mexico, pursuing roles as financiers, industrialists, investors, and agri-business investors, and farmers. Some did assimilate culturally, learning Spanish and sometimes marrying into elite Mexican families, but many others kept a separate identity and U.S. citizenship.[20] British, French, and German immigrants also became distinct immigrant groups during the Porfiriato.

Mass Chinese immigration to Mexico began in the 1876, following mass single-male migrations to Cuba and to Peru, where they worked as field laborers coolies. Chinese men immigrated mainly to northern Mexico, and the flow of migration increased following the passage of the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act in the U.S. Some then entered the U.S. illegally, but many more stayed in the borderlands area on the Mexican side, where they entered commerce as entrepreneurs of small-scale businesses, creating dry-goods stores and laundries in mining and agricultural towns, as well as small-scale manufacturing and truck farming. They came to monopolize the small-business sector. Chinese merchant houses were established in Pacific coast ports, such as Guaymas, hiring their country-men. There was significant anti-Chinese feeling in northern Mexico, which intensified during the Mexican Revolution.[21] They were expelled from Sonora in the 1930s and their businesses nationalized.[22]

Immigration policy

[edit]
Orphaned Polish children in Guanajuato that arrived with a larger group of refugees during the Second World War

With the Mexican government's intent to control migration flows and attract foreigners who can contribute to economic development, the new migration law simplifies foreigners' entrance and residency requirements. It replaces the two large immigration categories of immigrant and nonimmigrant with the categories of "visitor" and "temporary resident", while keeping the status of "permanent resident". In the General Law of Population, the two categories incorporate over 30 different types of foreigners, i.e., distinguished visitor, religious minister, etc., each with its own stipulations and requirements to qualify for entry and remain in the country. Under the new law the requirements are simplified, basically differentiating those foreigners who are allowed to work and those who are not. The law also expedites the permanent resident application process for retirees and other foreigners. For granting permanent residency, the law proposes using a point system based on factors such as level of education, employment experience, and scientific and technological knowledge.[23]

According to Article 81 of the Law and Article 70 of the regulations to the law, published on 28 September 2012, immigration officials are the only ones that can conduct immigration procedures, although the Federal Police may assist, but only under the request and guidance of the Institute of Migration. Verification procedures cannot be conducted in migrant shelters run by civil society organizations or by individuals that engage in providing humanitarian assistance to immigrants.

Undocumented immigration has been a problem for Mexico, especially since the 1970s. Although the number of deportations is declining with 61,034 registered cases in 2011, the Mexican government documented over 200,000 unauthorized border crossings in 2004 and 2005.[24] In 2011, 93% of undocumented immigrants in Mexico came from three countries -Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador- however, there is an increasing number of immigrants from Asia and Africa.[25]

History of immigration policy

[edit]
Juan Gelman Argentine poet and political activist who sought refuge in Mexico during Argentina's Dirty War
Jacobo Árbenz, 25th President of Guatemala, was exiled following the CIA-backed 1954 coup d'état and died in Mexico City in 1971.

Overview of Mexican immigration policy in regards to ethnicity or nationality:

  • 1823 – Permanent settlement and naturalization is restricted to Catholics[26] (see also General Colonization Law)
  • 1860 – Catholic favoritism ends with the establishment of freedom of religion[26]
  • 1909 – First comprehensive immigration law rejects racial discrimination (enacted under the Porfirian regime, but ignored by the governments that followed the Mexican Revolution)[26]
  • 1917 – Shorter naturalization times for Latin Americans[26]
  • 1921 – Confidential circular, followed by an accord between China and Mexico, restricts Chinese immigration[26]
  • 1923 – Confidential circular excludes South Asian Indians[26] (these confidential circulars were kept secretive in order to avoid diplomatic problems, such as with the British Empire or the United States)
  • 1924 – Confidential circular excludes blacks[26] (in practice, it excluded working class Afro-Latin Americans, but not elites)
  • 1926 – Confidential circular excludes gypsies[26]
  • 1926 – Exclusion of those who "constitute a danger of physical degeneration for our race"[26] (see also Blanqueamiento and national policy)
  • 1927 – Exclusion of Palestinians, Arabs, Syrians, Lebanese, Armenians and Turks[26]
  • 1929 – Confidential circular excludes Poles and Russians[26]
  • 1931 – Confidential circular excludes Hungarians[26]
  • 1933 – Exclusion or restrictions of blacks, Malays, Indians, the 'yellow race' (East Asians, except Japanese), Soviets, gypsies, Poles, Lithuanians, Czechs, Slovacks, Syrians, Lebanese, Palestinians, Armenians, Arabs and Turks.[26]
  • 1934 – Exclusion or restrictions extended to Aboriginals, Latvians, Bulgarians, Romanians, Persians, Yugoslavs, Greeks, Albanians, Afghans, Ethiopians, Algerians, Egyptians, Moroccans and Jews.[26]
  • 1937 – Quotas establishes unlimited immigration from the Americas and Spain; 5,000 annual slots for each of thirteen Western European nationalities and the Japanese; and 100 slots for nationals of each other country of the world.[26]
  • 1939 – Shorter naturalization times for Spaniards[26]
  • 1947 – Law rejects racial discrimination, but promotes a preference for "assimilable" foreigners[26]
  • 1974 – Law eliminates assimilability as a gauge for admission[26]
  • 1993 – Shorter naturalization times for Portuguese[26] (granted to Latin Americans and Iberians due to historical and cultural connections; requires two years of residence instead of five)

Temporary Migrant Regularization Program

[edit]
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, last Shah of Iran, took refuge in Cuernavaca, Mexico after the Islamic Revolution of 1979.

The Programa Temporal de Regularización Migratoria (PTRM) published on 12 January 2015 in the Diario Oficial de la Federación, is directed at those foreigners who have made their permanent residence in Mexico but due to 'diverse circumstances' did not regularize their stay in the country and find themselves turning to 'third parties' to perform various procedures, including finding employment.[27]

The program is aimed at foreign nationals who entered the country before 9 November 2012.[27] Approved foreigners received through the PTRM the status of 'temporary resident', document valid for four years,[27] and are eligible afterwards for permanent residency.[28] The temporary program ran from 13 January to 18 December 2015.[27]

In accordance with the provisions of Articles: 1, 2, 10, 18, 77, 126 and 133 of the Ley de Migración; 1 and 143 of the Reglamento de la Ley de Migración, any foreign national wishing to regularize their immigration status within Mexican territory, under the PTRM will complete the payment of fees for the following:

I. Proof of payment for receiving and examining the application of the procedure... ... MXN 1124.00 (USD 77.14 as of 12 January 2015)

II. For the issuance of the certificate giving them the status of temporary stay for four years ...... MXN 7914.00 (US$514.17)

Through Article 16 of the Ley Federal de Derechos, foreign national are exempt them from payment if it can be proven that they earn a wage at or below minimum wage.[27] During the period that the PTRM is in effect, no fine is applied (as is the practice otherwise).[27]

The PTRM was reenacted on 11 October 2016; eligibility was extended to undocumented migrants that entered the country before 9 January 2015.[28] Migrants are assured that they will not be detained nor deported when inquiring for information or submitting their application at an INM office.[28] Identification and proof of residency/entry date (such as bus or airplane tickets, utility bills, school records or expired visas) should be presented. If these proofs can not be provided, the legal testimony of two Mexicans/resident foreigners may also be accepted. The program runs until 19 December 2017.[28]

Public opinion

[edit]

The 2019 survey found that 58% of Mexican respondents oppose immigration from Central America.[29]

Demographics

[edit]
Foreign-born population of Mexico in 2020, by country of birth
  >500,000
  50,000–100,000
  20,000–50,000
  5,000–20,000
  1,000–5,000
  100–1,000

Most foreigners in Mexico counted in the Census come from the United States or other Hispanophone countries, with smaller numbers from Europe, East Asia, and the non-Hispanophone Americas. Their numbers have been rising as the country's economy develops, and now make up about 1% of the population.

Country of birth

[edit]
Place Country 2020 2010 Change %
1  United States 797,226 738,103 Increase 8.02%
2  Guatemala 56,810 35,322 Increase 60.83%
3  Venezuela 52,948 10,063 Increase 426.17%
4  Colombia 36,234 13,922 Increase 160.26%
5  Honduras 35,361 10,991 Increase 221.73%
6  Cuba 25,976 12,108 Increase 114.54%
7  Spain 20,763 18,873 Increase 10.01%
8  El Salvador 19,736 8,088 Increase 144.02%
9  Argentina 18,693 13,696 Increase 36.49%
10  Canada 12,439 7,943 Increase 56.60%
11  China 10,547 6,655 Increase 58.48%
12  France 9,080 7,163 Increase 26.76%
13  Brazil 8,689 4,532 Increase 91.73%
14  Peru 8,670 5,886 Increase 47.30%
15  Germany 6,860 6,214 Increase 10.40%
16  Italy 6,619 4,964 Increase 33.34%
17  Chile 6,532 5,267 Increase 24.02%
18  Haiti 5,895
19  Nicaragua 5,731 3,572 Increase 60.44%
20  Japan 5,539 3,004 Increase 84.39%
21  South Korea 5,339 3,960 Increase 34.82%
22  United Kingdom 4,030
23  Ecuador 3,995
24  Costa Rica 3,803
25  Dominican Republic 2,849
26  Belize 2,813
27  Uruguay 2,706
28  India 2,656
29  Bolivia 2,505
30  Russia 2,321
31  Panama 1,916
32   Switzerland 1,439
Other countries 25,492
TOTAL 1,212,252 961,121 Increase 26.13%
Source: INEGI (2020)[2][30]

By region

[edit]
Region 1990 2000 2010 2020
Africa 745 986 1,549 3,265
Americas 285,275 430,954 887,531 1,114,597
Asia 8,229 11,489 19,660 30,743
Europe 45,797 48,110 51,411 60,931
Oceania 200 821 556 699
Not Specified 578 257 414 2,017
Total 340,824 492,617 961,121 1,212,252

Source: INEGI Census[31]

Documentation and condition of stay in Mexico

[edit]

Temporary resident and permanent resident

[edit]

Article 52 from the Mexican Immigration Laws establishes that foreigners may remain on national territory under the conditions of stay of visitor, temporary resident and permanent resident, provided that they comply with the requirements established with the law. With the Temporary Resident Card (TRT), in terms of Article 52, Section VII establishes the following:

Authorizes the foreigner to remain in the country for a period not exceeding four years, with the possibility of obtaining a permit to work in exchange for remuneration in the country, subject to an offer of employment with the right to enter and leave the national territory as many times as desired.[32]

On the other hand, the Permanent Resident Card (TRP), in terms of Article 52, Section IX establishes:

Authorizes the foreigner to remain in the national territory indefinitely, with permission to work in exchange for remuneration in the country.[33]

The following table shows foreign people documented with the Temporary Resident Card (TRT) and Permanent Resident Card (TRP) in the period 2021–2023 (January - July).[34]

Country of origin 2023 2022 2021
Temporary Resident Permanent Resident Total Temporary Resident Permanent Resident Total Temporary Resident Permanent Resident Total
North America 7,992 6,026 14,018 15,012 10,740 25,752 10,781 8,788 19,569
 Canada 1,598 1,511 3,109 3,244 2,888 6,132 1,695 1,852 3,547
 United States 6,394 4,515 10,909 11,768 7,852 19,620 9,086 6,936 16,022
Central America 2,047 16,023 18,070 3,891 26,448 30,339 3,243 21,989 25,232
 Costa Rica 291 197 488 473 263 736 467 307 774
 El Salvador 398 2,765 3,163 814 4,750 5,564 664 4,009 4,673
 Guatemala 490 4,811 5,301 913 6,360 7,273 723 4,277 5,000
 Honduras 460 7,773 8,233 932 14,033 14,965 804 12,368 13,172
Other Countries 408 477 885 759 1,042 1,801 585 1,028 1,613
Caribbean 3,705 3,591 7,296 6,501 8,574 15,075 2,979 7,969 10,948
 Cuba 2,794 2,218 5,012 5,085 4,708 9,793 2,026 5,085 7,111
 Dominican Republic 205 298 503 457 590 1,047 329 407 736
 Haiti 672 1,047 1,719 897 3,229 4,126 563 2,453 3,016
Other Countries 34 28 62 62 47 109 61 24 85
South America 9,859 9,890 19,749 16,876 19,761 36,637 15,765 20,552 36,317
 Argentina 1,366 932 2,298 2,598 1,576 4,174 2,661 1,472 4,133
 Brazil 1,055 580 1,635 1,912 1,211 3,123 1,693 1,157 2,850
 Colombia 3,910 3,210 7,120 6,188 5,261 11,449 5,867 5,225 11,092
 Peru 819 406 1,225 1,318 675 1,993 995 691 1,686
 Venezuela 1,149 3,962 5,111 1,955 9,693 11,648 2,378 10,635 13,013
Other Countries 1,560 800 2,360 2,905 1,345 4,250 2,171 1,372 3,543
Europe 4,428 3,067 7,495 8,733 5,278 14,011 6,662 4,641 11,303
 France 565 325 890 1,391 597 1,988 1,201 569 1,770
 Germany 573 307 880 1,540 609 2,149 957 422 1,379
 Italy 371 299 670 775 576 1,351 738 651 1,389
 Russia 814 633 1,447 851 796 1,647 298 439 737
 Spain 902 667 1,569 1,844 1,294 3,138 1,653 1,345 2,998
 United Kingdom 317 192 509 657 342 999 518 269 787
Other Countries 886 644 1,530 1,675 1,064 2,739 1,297 946 2,243
Asia 6,615 2,563 9,178 8,473 4,140 12,613 6,898 3,958 10,856
 China 2,673 1,118 3,791 2,517 1,914 4,431 2,062 1,543 3,605
 India 1,178 285 1,463 1,782 418 2,200 1,248 552 1,800
 Japan 985 330 1,315 1,496 590 2,086 1,416 594 2,010
 South Korea 889 342 1,231 1,365 564 1,929 1,284 724 2,008
Other Countries 890 488 1,378 1,313 654 1,967 888 545 1,433
Oceania 152 71 223 284 178 462 148 112 260
 Australia 105 56 161 227 142 369 105 83 188
Other Countries 47 15 62 57 36 93 43 29 72
Africa 344 284 628 447 485 932 359 486 845
 Ghana 39 39 78 40 37 77 14 35 49
 Morocco 58 25 83 63 41 104 52 47 99
 Nigeria 48 81 129 85 197 282 55 121 176
Other Countries 199 139 338 259 210 469 238 283 521
Total 35,142 41,515 76,657 60,217 75,604 135,821 46,835 68,495 115,330

Immigrant groups in Mexico

[edit]

Immigrants arrive in Mexico for many reasons, most of the documented immigrants have arrived for economic and/or work-related reasons. Many, such as executives, professionals, scientists, artists, or athletes working for either Mexican or foreign companies, arrive with secure jobs. Retirement is the main motivation for immigrants who tend to be more permanent. Aside from dual national descendants of Mexicans, naturalized Mexicans, or the undocumented, 262,672 foreign residents live on its soil. The majority of its foreign residents are from the Guatemala, followed by Africa, Spain and Haiti.

North American

[edit]

American

[edit]
American turned-Mexican composer Conlon Nancarrow, who escaped political persecution during McCarthyism and made most of his career in Mexico City

Mexico hosts the largest community of Americans outside the United States.[35] As of 2022, there's an estimate of 1.6 million American immigrants in Mexico.[36][37] In 2020 people from the United States made the single largest immigrant group, at 65%, followed by 4% of Guatemalans and 4% of Venezuelans.[38]

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, people from the USA were by and large retirees, students, religious workers (Mormon missionaries, Protestant missionaries, etc.), Mexican-Americans, and spouses of Mexican citizens.[39] A few are professors who come employed by Mexican companies to teach English, university professors and corporate employees and executives.[40] With the advent of remote work after the COVID-19 pandemic and the soaring cost of living in the United States, many "digital nomads" have migrated to Mexico, roughly doubling the number of immigrants since 2010.[41][42]

While significant numbers live in Mexico year round, some residents do not stay the whole year. Retirees may live half a year in the U.S. to keep retiree benefits. Those called "snowbirds" arrive in autumn and leave in spring. The American community in Mexico is found throughout the country, but most concentrate in the US-Mexico border cities or nearby (Tijuana, Mexicali, Matamoros, Reynosa, Nogales, Ciudad Juárez, Nuevo Laredo), the big metropolises of inland Mexico (Mexico City, Guadalajara, Monterrey, Puebla, Toluca, Morelia, Querétaro), beach resorts (Los Cabos, Rosarito, San Carlos, Puerto Peñasco, Mazatlán, Tulúm, Puerto Morelos, Mérida, Puerto Escondido, Puerto Vallarta, Ixtapan, Manzanillo), or small towns popular among retirees (Tequila, Valle de Bravo, Tepozotlán, Malinalco, Pátzcuaro, San Miguel de Allende, Ajijic, Chapala).

Impacts on the Local Economy

For years, citizens from the United States have used Mexico as a prime location for expats. The reasons range from cheaper cost of living, acquiring seasonal housing, or a primary residence in which to work from home. For those who relocated for cheaper cost of living, it is a response to the global inflation crisis that was caused from the COVID-19 pandemic.[43] While in the United States, the economy is slowly healing, the US Dollar can still go farther, longer. They can buy substantial homes for less than a fifth of what it would be in the United States.[44] As a result, there has been a gradual, but significant influx of people who have permanently moved to Mexico. As of 2021, there are now 1.6 million United States expats who lived across Mexico.[45] Due to this substantial increase in foreign residents, whether part time of full time, Landlords have responded by driving up the prices around 17-20%[43] to take advantage of those who will come in and buy or rent their properties because they are still cheaper than the options within the US housing market.[46] Semi-permanent ventures like tourism as well have generated immense revenue for the government, with $11.5 Billion USD over the first five months of 2022.[46] The local residents are on the short end of the stick however because the increase in local housing costs drives up the value of the residences as a result. For some families, who have had local businesses for over half a century, have been forcefully evicted because they cannot keep up with the increasing value of the property around them.[46]

Central American

[edit]
Thousands of Guatemalan indigenous people and farmers fled to the camps of Chiapas, Tabasco and Campeche during the Guatemalan Civil War.

The largest recent immigrant flows to Mexico are from Central America, with a total of 66,868 immigrants from Guatemala, Honduras, Belize, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Panama and Nicaragua living in Mexico in 2010.[47] As a result of the Guatemalan Civil War and Salvadoran Civil War, Mexico received a significant population of refugees from those countries.

Transient migrants from Central America making their way to the U.S.-Mexico border. These migrants use a rail network known as La Bestia to traverse Mexican territory.

Recently, Mexico has also become a transit route for Central Americans and others (from the Caribbean, Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe)[48] into the United States. 2014 was the first year since records began when more non-Mexicans than Mexicans were apprehended trying to enter the United States illegally through the U.S.-Mexico border.[49] Non-Mexicans (vast majority of whom are Central American) were up from about 68,000 in 2007 to 257,000 in 2014; Mexicans dropped from 809,000 to 229,000 during the same period.[49]

In 2014, Mexico began to more heavily crackdown on these transient migrants.[50] According to Mexican officials, the Plan Frontera Sur (Southern Border Plan) is designed to retake control of the historically porous southern border and protect migrants from transnational crime groups.[50] However, the measures have been widely attributed to pressure from the United States, who does not want a repeat of 2014, when a surge of tens of thousands of women and children clogged up American immigration courts and resulted in a severe lack of space in detention centers at the US-Mexico border.[50] More than 45,000 migrants from Central America were deported from Mexico between January and April 2019.[51] In January 2020, Mexico detained 800 migrants who entered it illegally from Guatemala to reach the United States as part of the strict measures taken by the Mexican authorities to reduce migration to the United States through Mexico.[52]

Cuban

[edit]
Many of the popular musical genres (bolero, cha cha cha, mambo) of Mexico and the rest of Hispanic America emerged in the Caribbean.

Cuban immigration to Mexico has been on the rise in recent years. A large number of them use Mexico as a route to the U.S., and Mexico has been deporting a large number of Cubans who attempt to. About 63,000 Cubans live in Mexico[53] The number of registered Cuban residents increased 560% between 2010 and 2016, from 4,033 to 22,604 individuals. During the same period, there was a 710% increase in the Cuban presence in Quintana Roo; a fourth of the population (5,569 individuals) live in that state.

Haiti

[edit]
Haitian dancers at the 2011 Friend Cultures Fair in Mexico City

There is a significant Haitian diaspora in Mexico. According to a 2021 report, there are approximately 71,000 Haitian-born people living in Mexico.[54] Haitians arrived to the country during the Duvalier regime in the 1970s, with a second wave after the 2010 earthquake.[55][56] In more recent years, many have settled or stay temporarily in Mexico after being denied entrance to the United States.

South American

[edit]

Venezuela

[edit]
Graph of Mexicans born in Venezuela
Broken line represents simulated data (Source: INEGI).[57][58]

The most recent influx of immigrants has resulted from the Venezuelan diaspora, occurring due to the adverse effects of the Hugo Chávez and his Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela. Compared to the 2000 Census, there has been an increase from the 2,823 Venezuelan Mexicans in 2000 to 10,063 in 2010, a 357% increase of Venezuelan-born individuals living in Mexico.[57] As of 2020, there was an estimated 52,948 Venezuela-born residents in Mexico, making this the third largest immigrant community in the country and the largest immigrant community from South America in Mexico.[59]

Mexico granted 975 Venezuelans permanent identification cards in the first 5 months of 2014 alone, a number that doubled that of Venezuelans granted ID cards altogether in 2013 and a number that would have represented 35% of all Venezuelan Mexicans in Mexico in the year 2000.[60][57]

During June 2016, Venezuelans surpassed Americans (historically, first) for number of new work visas granted.[61] The 1,183 visas granted in June were a 20% increase from the 981 granted in May.[61] The main destinations are Mexico City, Nuevo León and Tabasco (due to the state's petroleum industry).[61]

Colombian

[edit]
Display of the Colombian flag at the Friend Cultures Fair of Mexico City

Currently, there are 36,294 registered residents from Colombia in Mexico, making it the 4th largest immigrant community in the country and the second-largest from South America.[2][30] However, it has been estimated that the total number of Colombians residing in Mexico, including unregisted migrants, could be as high as 73,000.[62] It was not until the 1970s when the presence of Colombians increased under the protection of political asylum as refugees by the Mexican government because of the Colombian guerrilla problems fleeing from their country during the 80s and many of them were protected and kept anonymous to avoid persecution.

Argentines

[edit]
Amanda Miguel was married to Diego Verdaguer, another Argentine-Mexican singer, until his death January 28, 2022.

Argentine immigration to Mexico took place in two waves; during the 1970s Military Dictatorship in Argentina a significant number of dissidents, journalists and political exiles immigrated to Mexico, with a second wave migrating during the 2001 economic crisis. Currently, the Argentine community is the 9th largest in Mexico, with about 18,693 documented residents living in Mexico as of 2020.[2][30]

The largest Argentine communities are in Mexico City (with a sizeable congregation in the Condesa neighborhood) and in Quintana Roo, where the number of Argentines doubled between 2011 and 2015, and now make a total of 10,000, making up the largest number of foreigners in the state.[63] There are smaller communities in Leon, Guadalajara, Puebla, Cancun, Playa del Carmen, Tulum, Mérida, Monterrey, and Tampico. Most Argentines established in Mexico come from the city of Buenos Aires and the provinces of Buenos Aires, Santa Fe, Cordoba, Mendoza and Tucuman. The Argentine community has participated in the opening of establishments such as restaurants, bars, boutiques, modeling consultants, foreign exchange interbank markets, among other lines of business.

Asian

[edit]

Mexico has seen immigration from different parts of Asia throughout its history. The first known Asians arrived during the Colonial era as slaves, labourers and adventurers from the Philippines, southern China and India. Smaller numbers of immigrants came from Korea, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), Indonesia, Cambodia, Japan and the Malay peninsula. This group of immigrants were collectively described as "Chino" meaning Chinese despite coming from many diverse origins.[64][65][66] During the early 20th century, a significant number of Asians, primarily Chinese and Korean, were imported as labourers. These immigrants were known as Henequen and Chinetescos and were heavily concentrated in agricultural plantations in the Pacific states (e.g. Sinaloa) and the Yucatán Peninsula.

Overall, Asian immigration to Mexico, as with many other Latin American countries, has mainly come from countries in East Asia (such as China and Japan) and Western Asia (namely Lebanon and Syria).[67]

Korean

[edit]
Monument in Merida, Yucatan commemorating 100 years of Korean immigration

A more recent wave (late 20th and early 21st century) of Korean immigrants have arrived as merchants and skilled labourers.[68] Modern immigrants can be found in large cities (Mexico City, Monterrey, Querétaro), while Korean descendants are most numerous in the coastal regions like Baja California, Sonora, Guerrero, Veracruz, Campeche, Yucatán and Quintana Roo. According to INM, in 2009 there were 5,518 South Koreans and 481 North Koreans living in México.[69] There are an estimated 40,000 descendants of Korean henequen workers.

Chinese

[edit]
Chinese-Mexican family expelled from Mexico to Macau during WWII. Anti-Chinese sentiment in Mexico started in the 1920s and lasted until the 1960s.[70]

The story of Chinese immigration to Mexico extends from the late 19th century to the 1930s. By the 1920s, there was a significant population of Chinese nationals, with Mexican wives and Chinese-Mexican children. Most of these were deported in the 1930s to the United States and China with a number being repatriated in the late 1930s and in 1960. Smaller groups returned from the 1930s to the 1980s. The two main Chinese-Mexican communities are in Mexicali and Mexico City but few are of pure Chinese blood.[71]

The city of Mexicali in Baja California has the largest Chinese population in Mexico and the largest Chinatown called La Chinesca. The culture and language from the mainly Cantonese and Mandarin-speaking peoples are evident in the food, architecture, and everyday life in Mexico City. The Chinese entered the nation in the 19th century to build railroads, and many xenophobic acts were taken against them because Mexico preferred European immigrants. According to the 2010 Census there are 6,655 Chinese immigrants living in Mexico.[72]

Filipino

[edit]
The mantón de Manila were originally inspired by the Filipino pañuelo,[73][74][75] both also influenced the later designs of the rebozo[76]

Filipinos arrived from the Philippines via the Manila galleons when the country was under Spanish colonial rule (1540s-1898) and was directly administrated from New Spain until around 1815. They also arrived during the U.S. American territorial rule (1899–1946). Christianized Filipinos comprised the majority of free Asian immigrants (chino libre) during the Spanish colonial era and could own property and have rights that even Native Americans did not have, including the right to carry a sword and dagger for personal protection.[77] Filipinos introduced many cultural practices to Mexico; such as the method of making coconut palm wine called "tubâ",[78][79][80] and possibly the guayabera (which is still called "filipina" in Yucatán) from the barong tagalog. Filipino words also entered Mexican vernacular, such as the word for palapa (originally meaning "coconut palm leaf petiole" in Tagalog), which became applied to a type of thatching using coconut leaves that resembles the Filipino nipa hut in Mexican Spanish.[77]

The Manila-Acapulco Galleon Memorial at Plaza Mexico in Intramuros, Manila

During the early period of the Spanish colonization of the Philippines, Spaniards took advantage of the indigenous alipin (bonded serf) system in the Philippines to circumvent the Leyes de las Indias and acquire Filipino slaves for the voyage back to New Spain. Though the numbers are unknown, it was so prevalent that slaves brought on ships were restricted to one per person (except persons of rank) in the "Laws Regarding Navigation and Commerce" (1611–1635) to avoid exhausting ship provisions. They were also taxed heavily upon arrival in Acapulco in an effort to reduce slave traffic. Traffic in Filipina women as slaves, servants, and mistresses of government officials, crew, and passengers, also caused scandals in the 17th century. Women comprised around 20% of the migrants from the Philippines.[77][81]

Filipinos were also pressed into service as sailors, due to the native maritime culture of the Philippine Islands. By 1619, the crew of the Manila galleons were composed almost entirely of native Filipino sailors. Many of whom died during the voyages due to harsh treatment and dangerous conditions. Many of the galleons were also old, overloaded, and poorly repaired. A law passed in 1608 restricted the gear of Filipino sailors to "ropa necesaria" which consisted of a single pair of breeches, further causing a great number of deaths of Filipino sailors through exposure. These conditions prompted King Philip III to sign a law in 1620 forcing merchants to issue proper clothing to native crews. During this period, many Filipino sailors deserted as soon as they reached Acapulco. Sebastian de Piñeda, the captain of the galleon Espiritu Santo complained to the king in 1619 that of the 75 Filipino crewmen aboard the ship, only 5 remained for the return voyage. The rest had deserted. These sailors settled in Mexico and married locals (even though some may have been previously married in the Philippines), particularly since they were also in high demand by wine-merchants in Colima for their skills in the production of tubâ (palm wine).[81][82]

Rice was introduced very early into Mexican cuisine due to contact with East Asia from the Manilla Galleon.

Filipinos mostly settled in the regions near the terminal ports of the Manila galleons. These include Acapulco, Barra de Navidad, and San Blas, Nayarit, as well as numerous smaller intermediate settlements along the way. They also settled the regions of Colima and Jalisco before the 17th century, which were seriously depopulated of Native American settlements during that period due to the Cocoliztli epidemics and Spanish forced labor.[81] They also settled in signiciant numbers in the barrio San Juan of Mexico City, although in modern times, the area has become more associated with later Chinese migrants.[77]

In modern times, historical Filipino migrants to Mexico have lost their cultural identity and are often confused with the more recent Chinese immigrants due to the fact that Filipinos and other Asian migrants (mostly from Spanish and Portuguese territories in Southeast Asia and South Asia) were all known as chinos or indios chinos during the colonial era, despite only a very small minority of them being actually from China. Filipinos also adopted Spanish names and surnames with the implementation of the Catálogo alfabético de apellidos during the mid-19th century. This makes it very difficult to trace and recognize Filipino immigrants in colonial records.[83][81][84][65][66]

There are approximately 200,000 (0.2%) Mexican people who can partly claim Filipino ancestry stemming from colonial times. According to INM, in 2009 there were 823 immigrants from the Philippines residing in Mexico.[85] A genetic study in 2018 found that around a third of the population of Guerrero have 10% Filipino ancestry.[86]

Japanese

[edit]
Carlos Kasuga prominent businessman and president of Yakult Mexico.

The Japanese community is also important in Mexico, and they reside mainly in Mexico City, Morelia, San Luis Potosí, Puebla, Monterrey, Querétaro, León, Toluca, Tijuana, Guadalajara, and Aguascalientes, and the immigrant colony in the state of Chiapas known as Colonia Enomoto. The Japanese language is important in their cultural life in Mexico and many institutions for nikkei exist and those wishing to learn the language and their ways of life can attend these lyceums. According to INM, in 2009 there were 4,485 Japanese immigrants residing in Mexico.[85]

Arab world

[edit]
Salma Hayek, Mexican actress of Lebanese descent

Ethnologue reports that 400,000 Mexicans speak Arabic.[87]

The Arab Mexican population consists of Lebanese, Syrians and Palestinians, whose families arrived in Mexico after the fall of the Ottoman Empire in World War I. The majority of them are Christian but some are Muslims.

Carlos Slim is a Mexican business magnate, investor, and philanthropist of Lebanese descent. He was ranked as the richest person in the world by Forbes business magazine, from 2010 to 2013.

Jewish

[edit]
Synagogue of Mexico City

The history of the Jews in Mexico began in 1519 with the arrival of Conversos, often called Marranos or "Crypto-Jews", referring to those Jews forcibly converted to Catholicism and that then became subject to the Spanish Inquisition.

When the monopoly of the Roman Catholic Church in Mexico was replaced with religious toleration during the nineteenth-century Liberal reform, Jews could openly immigrate to Mexico. They came from Europe and later from the crumbling Ottoman Empire, including Syria, until the first half of the 20th century. Others arrived as refugees during World War II, escaping from the Jewish Holocaust. Today, most Jews in Mexico are descendants of this immigration and still divided by diasporic origin, principally Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazi and Judaeo-Spanish-speaking Sephardim. They are concentrated in big cities: Mexico City, Guadalajara, Monterrey.

Armenians

[edit]

The Armenian diaspora population in Mexico is small in comparison with other immigrant groups. The majority of the population arrived in Mexico between 1910 and 1928, most of them because of the Armenian genocide.

European

[edit]
Immigrant registration form of a Jewish Lithuanian woman that emigrated to Mexico in 1934. The restrictions applied to Eastern Europeans did not eliminate migration of affected groups.

Although Mexico never received massive European immigration after its independence, over 1 million Europeans immigrated to Spanish America during the colonial period, which relative to the population of the time, could be said to have been massive European immigration. Although they were in their majority from Spain, other Europeans immigrated illegally. They migrated to Mexico and Peru. They were called "inmigrantes clandestinos", of which 100,000 were Spanish.[citation needed]

Towards the end of the Porfiriato, there were an estimated 100,000 to 200,000 foreigners in the country.[88] The three largest groups were the Spanish, the American and the Chinese.

From 1911 to 1931, 226,000 immigrants arrived in Mexico,[89] the majority of which were from Europe.

British

[edit]

There are Mexicans of English, Welsh and Scottish descent. According to Mexico's Migration Institute, in 2009 there were 3,761 British expatriates living in Mexico.[85]

Cornish culture still survives in local architecture and food in the state of Hidalgo. The Scottish and Welsh have also made their mark in Mexico, especially in the states of Hidalgo, Jalisco, Aguascalientes, and Veracruz. British immigrants formed the first football teams in Mexico in the late 19th century. Northern Spaniards of Celtic ancestry like the Asturians, Galicians, and Cantabrians, have also left an imprint in Mexican culture and their languages formed many distinct accents in various regions in Mexico, especially in the central and northern states.

French

[edit]
Palacio de Hierro at Orizaba, Veracruz. Designed by Gustave Eiffel.

Mexico received immigration from France in waves in the 19th and 20th centuries. According to the 2010 census, there were 7,163 French nationals living in Mexico. According to the French consulate general, there are 30,000 French citizens in Mexico as of 2015.[90]

The French language is often taught and studied in secondary public education and in universities throughout the country. French may also be heard occasionally in the state of Veracruz in the cities of Jicaltepec, San Rafael, Mentideros, and Los Altos, where the architecture and food is also very French. These immigrants came from Haute-Saône département in France, especially from Champlitte and Bourgogne[clarification needed].

Another French group were the "Barcelonettes" from the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence département, who migrated specifically to Mexico to find jobs and work in merchandising and are well known in Mexico City, Puebla, Veracruz and Yucatán.

An important French village in Mexico is Santa Rosalía, Baja California Sur, where the French culture/architecture are still found. Other French cultural traits are in a number of regional cultures such as the states of Jalisco and Sinaloa.

French influence is notable in Mexican pastries and cheese production.

During the second French intervention (1860s) many parts of the country, including Mexico City, effectively fell under the control of France under the administration of the Austrian puppet-Emperor Maximilian of Habsburg. The military campaign imported thousands of soldiers from France (some of them black) and its European allies at the time. It's said that at the end of the war some soldiers remained in rural areas in El Bajío. The descendants of these soldiers are allegedly found in the state of Jalisco in the region called Los Altos de Jalisco and in many towns around this region, for instance in the state of Michoacán in cities like Coalcomán, Aguililla, Zamora, and Cotija. One vernacular hypothesis for the origin of the word "mariachi" (the folk music of Central-Western Mexico) is that it comes from the French "marriage", because it was the music played at weddings of French landowning families of Jalisco and Michoacán. It should also be noted that the region already was a hub of Spanish-descended Mexicans since colonial times.

Other Francophone peoples include those from Belgium such as the Walloons and Franco-Swiss from Switzerland. The Belgians, started by the veteran Ch. Loomans, tried to establish a Belgian colony in the state of Chihuahua called Nueva Bélgica, and hundreds of Belgian settlers established it, but many moved to the capital of the state and other towns around the area, where the Walloon and French could be heard.

The Occitan language can be heard in the state of Guanajuato, it is also known as Langue d'oc is a language originally spoken in Southern France.

German

[edit]
Students of the Colegio Alemán Alexander von Humboldt, which was founded by German immigrants in 1894

The Plautdietsch language, is spoken by descendants of German and Dutch Mennonite immigrants in the states of Chihuahua and Durango. Other German communities are in Nuevo León, Puebla, Mexico City, Sinaloa and Chiapas, and the Yucatán Peninsula. The largest German school outside of Germany is in Mexico City (Alexander von Humboldt school). These represent the large German populations where they still try to preserve the German culture (evident in its popular regional polka-like music types, conjunto and norteño) and language. Other strong German communities lie in Coahuila and Zacatecas (notably the Mennonites), Chiapas (Tapachula) and other parts of Nuevo León (esp. the Monterrey area has a large German minority), Tamaulipas (the Rio Grande Valley in connections to German American culture and Mexican American or Tejano influences), Puebla (Nuevo Necaxa) where the German culture and language have been preserved to different extents. According to the 2010 census, there were 6,214 Germans living in Mexico.[72] As of 2012, about 20,000 Germans reside in Mexico.[91]

German influence in northern Mexico boosted beer production in the region. Big breweries such as Cuauhtemoc-Moctezuma originated with German immigrants.

Of special interest is the settlement Villa Carlota: that was the name under which two German farming settlements, in the villages of Santa Elena and Pustunich in Yucatán, were founded during the Second Mexican Empire (1864–1867).[92] Villa Carlota attracted a total of 443 German-speaking immigrants, most of them were farmers and artisans who emigrated with their families: the majority came from Prussia and many among them were Protestants.[93] Although in general these immigrants were well received by the hosting society, and the Imperial government honored to the extent of its capabilities the contract it offered to these farmers, the colonies collapsed in 1867.[94] After the disintegration of Villa Carlota as such, some families migrated to other parts of the peninsular, into the United States and back to Germany. Many stayed in Yucatán, where there are descendants of these pioneers with last names such as Worbis, Dietrich and Sols, among others.[95]

As of 2012 there were an estimate of 2,000,000 Mexicans with some partial German ancestry, without counting the ones with total German ancestry, making Mexico the third country with the largest German heritage in Latin America, behind Brazil and Argentina.[96]

Irish

[edit]
Commemorative plaque placed at the San Jacinto Square in the district of San Ángel, Mexico City in 1959: "In memory of the Irish soldiers of the heroic St. Patrick's Battalion, martyrs who gave their lives to the Mexican cause in the United States' unjust invasion of 1847"

There is also an Irish-Mexican population in Hidalgo, Veracruz and the northern states. According to INM, in 2009 there were 289 Irish expatriates living in Mexico.[69]

Many Mexican Irish communities existed in Mexican Texas until the revolution. Many Irish then sided with Catholic Mexico against Protestant pro-US elements, forming the Batallón de San Patricio, a battalion of U.S. troops who deserted and fought alongside the Mexican Army against the United States in the Mexican–American War (1846–48). In some cases, Irish immigrants or Americans left from California (the Irish Confederate army of Fort Yuma, Arizona during the U.S. Civil War (1861–65). Álvaro Obregón (O'Brien) was president of Mexico during 1920-24 and Ciudad Obregón and its airport are named in his honor. Actor Anthony Quinn is another famous Mexican of Irish descent. There are also monuments in Mexico City paying tribute to the Irish who fought for Mexico in the 19th century.

Italian

[edit]
Italian community at Chipilo, Puebla celebrating a football match

There has not been a huge influx of Italians to Mexico compared to other countries such as Brazil, Argentina and the United States. Many minor migration waves are documented however, the earliest probably being as old as the conquest of the Chichimeca lands in the early 16th century.[97]

The most prominent recent wave of migration came from northern Italy and Veneto in the late 19th century, and their descendants today are well assimilated in Mexican society. The town of Chipilo in the state of Puebla (nowadays part of Greater Puebla City) was founded by Italians, and most of its inhabitants still speak the Venetian language together with Spanish. The exact number of Italian descendants is not known, but it is estimated that there around 850,000 Italian Mexicans in the country.[98] As of 2012, 20,000 Italians reside in Mexico[91]

Russian

[edit]
Leon Trotsky arriving with his wife Natalia to Mexico, welcomed by Frida Kahlo

According to INM in 2009 1,396 Russians are living documented in Mexico.[85] According to the Russian embassy, 25,000 reside in Mexico.[99]

Most left Russia during its communist regime (Soviet Union), taking advantage of the Mexican law allowing migrants from communist countries to apply for asylum as soon as they touched Mexican soil, and the ability to become legal residents of Mexico. [citation needed] Leon Trotsky famously moved to Mexico escaping persecution from Stalin, and was eventually murdered at Stalin's behest in Mexico City. The Spiritual Christian Pryguny were a small early 20th century immigrant group to Valle de Guadalupe, Baja California.

Spanish and Portuguese

[edit]
Statue in Veracruz, Veracruz commemorating the Spanish immigrants that arrived as a result of the Spanish Civil War

Spaniards make up the largest group of Europeans in Mexico. Most of them arrived during the 300 years of colonial period and contributed one of the core components of Mexican culture. Genetic studies show that a majority of Mexicans have European ancestry to various degrees, most of which is Iberian and dates back to the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries.[100] The second most prominent migration wave is due to the Spanish Civil War (1936–39) and the subsequent Francisco Franco regime (1939–75).

The first Spaniards (and the first Europeans) on record who arrived to the current territory of Mexico are Gonzalo Guerrero and Gerónimo de Aguilar, shipwrecked sailors originally sent from the Dominican Republic to Panamá. They made landfall in 1511 on the Yucatán Peninsula. Both of them were later found by the 1519 expedition of Hernán Cortés. Gerónimo de Aguilar rejoined the Spanish and famously went to become the Yucatec Maya interpreter who helped in the military campaign against the Aztec Empire, whereas Gonzalo Guerrero decided to stay and fight on the side of the Maya against the Spanish.

The expedition of Hernán Cortés included people from Extremadura, Andalusia, Galicia and La Mancha, as well as Muslim converts from Córdoba and Granada. They sailed from Cuba and around the Yucatán Peninsula, the shores of the Gulf of Mexico and then made landfall on Veracruz leading to the conquest of the Aztec Empire and the beginning of New Spain. Nuño de Guzmán's campaign is another famous early migration wave which included several Spanish and Portuguese families. Guzmán and his followers moved to Mexico under the request of king Charles V in order to counterbalance Cortés' growing power. These people settled and founded virtually all the cities in contemporary North-central and North-Western Mexico, from Guanajuato all the way to Culiacán, between the 1540s and 1580s. By the end of the 16th century, both common and aristocrat people were migrating to Mexico and disseminating through its territory.

Niños de Morelia (the children of Morelia), originally a group of 456 minors, children of Spanish Republicans who were sent to Mexico in 1937

More recent immigrants came during the Spanish Civil War. From 1940 to 1946 the Spanish Republican government in exile was officially reconstituted in Mexico, and the Mexican government under Lázaro Cárdenas financially supported and gave asylum to the Spanish Republicans. Many went to become famous artists and academics in Mexico, such as artists Luis Buñuel, Remedios Varo, philosopher José Gaos and the Álvarez-Buylla family of scientists. Some of the migrants returned to Spain after the civil war in 1975, but many remained. According to the 2010 census, there were 18,873 Spaniards proper living in Mexico.[72]

Due to the 2008 Financial Crisis and the resulting economic decline and high unemployment in Spain, many Spaniards have been emigrating to Mexico to seek new opportunities.[101] For example, during the last quarter of 2012, a number of 7,630 work permits were granted to Spaniards.[102]

The article on Basque Mexicans covers the large segment of Spaniards and some French immigrants of the Basque ethnic group.

Other Europeans

[edit]
The traditional music of Northern Mexico is heavily influenced by polkas and the music of Central Europe.

Small waves of immigrants from Poland, Ukraine and other Eastern European countries (Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania etc.), arrived during the Cold War.

Fewer immigrants came from Belgium, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Cyprus, Greece (see Greek Mexican), Albania, Croatia, Serbia, Czech Republic, Montenegro, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Slovakia, Slovenia, North Macedonia, Malta, Portugal and Cape Verde.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Gutiérrez, Ramón A. (29 July 2019), "Mexican Immigration to the United States", Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History, doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.146, ISBN 978-0-19-932917-5, retrieved 5 December 2023
  2. ^ a b c d [1] Censo de Población y Vivienda 2020
  3. ^ Fisher, John R. "Casa de Contratación" in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, vol. 1, pp. 589–90. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1996.
  4. ^ Altman, Ida. "Spanish Society in Mexico City After the Conquest." Hispanic American Historical Review (1991)71(3):413-45.
  5. ^ Altman, Ida et al. The Early History of Greater Mexico. Prentice Hall 2003, pp. 67-68.
  6. ^ Hoberman, Louisa Schell. Mexico's Merchant Elite, 1590-1660. Durham: Duke University Press 1991.
  7. ^ Altman, Ida. Transatlantic Ties in the Spanish Empire: Brihuega, Spain, and Puebla, Mexico, 1560-1620. Stanford University Press, 2000.
  8. ^ Aguirre Beltrán, Gonzalo, La población negra de México, 1519–1810: Estudio etnohistórico. Mexico 1946
  9. ^ Vinson, Ben III. Before Mestizaje: The Frontiers of Race and Caste in Colonial Mexico. New York: Cambridge University Press 2018.
  10. ^ Altman, The Early History of Greater Mexico, p. 263.
  11. ^ Thomas Gage's Travels in the New World, J.E.S. Thompson (ed.), University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1958.
  12. ^ Seijas, Tatiana. Asian Slaves in Colonial Mexico: From Chinos to Indians. New York: Cambridge University Press 2014.
  13. ^ Schurz, William. The Manila Galleon. New York: E.P. Dutton 1939, 1959
  14. ^ Bailey, Gauvin Alexander. "A Mughal Princess in Baroque New Spain: Catarina de San Juan (1606–1688), The China Poblana." Anales del Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas 71 (1997) 37-73.
  15. ^ Villalobos Velásquez, Rosario. Inmigrantes Británicos en el Distrito Minero del Real del Monte y Pachuca, 1824-1947. Mexico City: The British Council/Archivo Histórico y Museo Minería 2004.
  16. ^ Wahlstrom, Todd W. The Southern Exodus to Mexico: Migration Across the Borderlands After the American Civil War. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2015.
  17. ^ Hardy, B. Carmon. "The trek south: How the Mormons went to Mexico." The Southwestern Historical Quarterly 73.1 (1969): 1-16.
  18. ^ Dormady, Jason H., and Jared M. Tamez, eds. Just South of Zion: The Mormons in Mexico and Its Borderlands. University of New Mexico Press, 2015.
  19. ^ Hardy, B. Carmon. "Cultural" Encystment" as a Cause of the Mormon Exodus from Mexico in 1912." Pacific Historical Review 34.4 (1965): 439-454.
  20. ^ Hart, John Mason. Empire and Revolution: The Americans in Mexico since the Civil War. Berkeley: University of California Press 2002.
  21. ^ Hu-Dehart, Evelyn. "Racism and Anti-Chinese Persecution in Mexico." Amerasia 9:2 (1982).
  22. ^ Hu-Dehart, Evelyn. "Chinese" in Encyclopedia of Mexico . Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997, pp. 245-248
  23. ^ Gonzalez-Murphy, Laura. "Protecting Immigrant Rights in Mexico: Understanding the State-Civil Society Nexus," Routledge, New York, Forthcoming 2013
  24. ^ "Estadísticas"
  25. ^ "Indios, chinos, somalíes... así son los migrantes invisibles de México". BBC Mundo. 22 July 2011. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s FitzGerald, David Scott; Cook-Martín, David (2014). Culling the Masses. Harvard University Press. p. 220. ISBN 978-0674729049. Retrieved 16 December 2015.
  27. ^ a b c d e f "Programa Temporal de Regularización Migratoria". Instituto Nacional de Migración. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 2 March 2015.
  28. ^ a b c d "Apoya el INM a extranjeros a que regularicen su situación migratoria, a través del PTRM". gob.mx (in Spanish).
  29. ^ "Shocking photo of drowned father and daughter highlights migrants' border peril". The Guardian. 26 June 2019.
  30. ^ a b c Censo de Población y Vivienda 2010
  31. ^ [2] Censo de Población y Vivienda 1990, 2000, 2010 & 2020
  32. ^ "Mexico's Immigration Laws in English".
  33. ^ "Mexico's Immigration Laws in English".
  34. ^ Documentación y condición de estancia en México
  35. ^ "Home Page | Overseas Vote" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 October 2013. Retrieved 4 July 2023.
  36. ^ "U.S. Relations With Mexico".
  37. ^ McCamy, Laura. "There are 1.5 million Americans living in Mexico — here are 8 things Americans wished they'd known before they moved". Business Insider. Retrieved 4 July 2023.
  38. ^ "Población extranjera en México por nacionalidad 2020". Statista (in Spanish). Retrieved 4 July 2023.
  39. ^ Miller, Andrew Mark; News, Fox (28 July 2022). "Mexico City residents angered by influx of Americans speaking English, gentrifying area: report". Retrieved 4 July 2023. {{cite web}}: |last2= has generic name (help)
  40. ^ "Portal Informativo | Tecnológico de Monterrey". 11 June 2015. Archived from the original on 11 June 2015. Retrieved 4 July 2023.
  41. ^ Suarez, David Culver, Karol (22 August 2022). "Mexico City becomes 'work from home' haven for US expats, but locals are getting priced out | CNN Business". CNN. Retrieved 4 July 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  42. ^ Vidaña, Oscar Alcántara (2 November 2021). "Mexico City's Remote Worker Problem". Slate. ISSN 1091-2339. Retrieved 4 July 2023.
  43. ^ a b "Are US expats driving up housing prices in Mexico?". www.aa.com.tr. Retrieved 4 December 2024.
  44. ^ Cota, Isabella (14 May 2024). "The strength of the peso is deterring many Americans from moving to Mexico". EL PAÍS English. Retrieved 4 December 2024.
  45. ^ https://www.aa.com.tr/en/americas/are-us-expats-driving-up-housing-prices-in-mexico/2681771
  46. ^ a b c Suarez, David Culver,Karol (22 August 2022). "Mexico City becomes 'work from home' haven for US expats, as locals are getting priced out | CNN Business". CNN. Retrieved 4 December 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  47. ^ Insituto Nacional de Migración "Estadísticas." 2012. {http://www.inm.gob.mx/index.php/page/Estadisticas_Migratorias}
  48. ^ Semple, Kirk (23 September 2016). "Haitians, After Perilous Journey, Find Door to U.S. Abruptly Shut". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 September 2016.
  49. ^ a b "U.S. border apprehensions of Mexicans fall to historic lows". Pew Research. 30 December 2014. Retrieved 5 January 2015.
  50. ^ a b c Lakhani, Nina (4 February 2015). "Mexico deports record numbers of women and children in US-driven effort". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  51. ^ "Trump announces tariffs on Mexico over immigration". The Hill. 30 May 2019.
  52. ^ "Mexican security forces detain 800 Central American migrants". Reuters. 24 January 2020. Retrieved 26 January 2020.
  53. ^ "México para cubanos: ¿destino o tránsito? CubanetCubanet". www.cubanet.org. 5 September 2014.
  54. ^ "Haitians Denied Entry Into The U.S. May Have To Start New Lives In Mexico". NPR. Retrieved 4 August 2023.
  55. ^ "5 Haitian Mexicans Talk About Multiculturalism In Mexico". 26 August 2016. Archived from the original on 26 August 2016. Retrieved 4 July 2023.
  56. ^ "Haitians reunite with families in Mexico". Los Angeles Times. 27 April 2010. Retrieved 4 July 2023.
  57. ^ a b c "Estadísticas Históricas de México" (PDF). National Institute of Statistics and Geography. pp. 83, 86. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 February 2016. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
  58. ^ "Censo de Población y Vivienda 2010" (PDF). National Institute of Statistics and Geography. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
  59. ^ "Población Extranjera de México por Nacionalidad". Statista. Archived from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 16 June 2024.
  60. ^ Symmes Cobb, Julia; Garcia Rawlins, Carlos (15 October 2014). "Economic crisis, political strife drive Venezuela brain-drain". Reuters. Retrieved 15 October 2014.
  61. ^ a b c Flores, Zenyazen. "Venezolanos desplazan a EU con más permisos para trabajar en México". El Financiero. Retrieved 5 August 2016.[permanent dead link]
  62. ^ "Data". colombianewyork.com. Archived from the original on 1 November 2011.
  63. ^ SIPSE, Grupo (18 January 2015). "Argentinos encabezan población de extranjeros en Playa del Carmen".
  64. ^ Leslie Bethell (1984). Leslie Bethell (ed.). The Cambridge History of Latin America. Volume 2 of The Cambridge History of Latin America: Colonial Latin America. I-II (illustrated, reprint ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 21. ISBN 0521245168.
  65. ^ a b Ignacio López-Calvo (2013). The Affinity of the Eye: Writing Nikkei in Peru. Fernando Iwasaki. University of Arizona Press. p. 134. ISBN 978-0816599875.
  66. ^ a b Dirk Hoerder (2002). Cultures in Contact: World Migrations in the Second Millennium. Andrew Gordon, Alexander Keyssar, Daniel James. Duke University Press. p. 200. ISBN 0822384078.
  67. ^ Lizcano Fernández, Francisco. "Composición Étnica de las Tres Áreas Culturales del Continente Americano al Comienzo del Siglo XXI" [Ethnic Composition of the Three Cultural Areas of the American Continent at the Beginning of the 21st Century] (PDF). Convergencia. Revista de Ciencias Sociales (in Spanish). Toluca, México: Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México: 194–195. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 June 2013. En principio, se pueden distinguir dos grupos muy distintos al interior de esta etnia: el que procede de Asia occidental (sobre todo árabes cristianos llegados desde Siria y Líbano) y el que salió de Asia oriental (chinos y japoneses principalmente).
  68. ^ "Five Generations On, Mexico's Koreans Long for Home". The Chosun Ilbo. 16 August 2007. Archived from the original on 21 June 2011. Retrieved 30 July 2009.
  69. ^ a b Chavez, Ernesto y Cobo, Salvador, 2012. "Extranjeros Residentes en México: Una aproximación cuantitativa con base en los registros administrativos del INM" INM, Mexico DF, 2012
  70. ^ "Chinese-Mexicans Celebrate Return To Mexico". HuffPost. 27 November 2012. Archived from the original on 27 November 2012. Retrieved 3 July 2023.
  71. ^ Schiavone Camacho, Julia Maria (November 2009). "Crossing Boundaries, Claiming a Homeland: The Mexican Chinese Transpacific Journey to Becoming Mexican, 1930s-1960s". Pacific Historical Review. 78 (4). Berkeley: 547–565. doi:10.1525/phr.2009.78.4.545.
  72. ^ a b c "Censo de Población y Vivienda 2020". INEGI. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  73. ^ Arranz, Adolfo (27 May 2018). "The China Ship". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 19 May 2019.
  74. ^ Nash, Elizabeth (13 October 2005). Seville, Cordoba, and Granada: A Cultural History. Oxford University Press. pp. 136–143. ISBN 9780195182040.
  75. ^ Maxwell, Robyn (2012). Textiles of Southeast Asia: Trade, Tradition and Transformation. Tuttle Publishing. ISBN 9781462906987.
  76. ^ Schevill, Margot Blum; Berlo, Janet Catherine; Dwyer, Edward B., eds. (2010). Textile Traditions of Mesoamerica and the Andes: An Anthology. University of Texas Press. p. 312. ISBN 9780292787612.
  77. ^ a b c d Carrillo, Rubén. "Asia llega a América. Migración e influencia cultural asiática en Nueva España (1565-1815)". www.raco.cat. Asiadémica. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
  78. ^ Astudillo-Melgar, Fernando; Ochoa-Leyva, Adrián; Utrilla, José; Huerta-Beristain, Gerardo (22 March 2019). "Bacterial Diversity and Population Dynamics During the Fermentation of Palm Wine From Guerrero Mexico". Frontiers in Microbiology. 10: 531. doi:10.3389/fmicb.2019.00531. PMC 6440455. PMID 30967846.
  79. ^ Veneracion, Jaime (2008). "The Philippine-Mexico Connection". In Poddar, Prem; Patke, Rajeev S.; Jensen, Lars (eds.). Historical Companion to Postcolonial Literatures – Continental Europe and its Empires. Edinburgh University Press. p. 574. ISBN 9780748630271.
  80. ^ Mercene, Floro L. (2007). Manila Men in the New World: Filipino Migration to Mexico and the Americas from the Sixteenth Century. UP Press. p. 125. ISBN 9789715425292.
  81. ^ a b c d Guzmán-Rivas, Pablo (1960). "Geographic Influences of the Galleon Trade on New Spain". Revista Geográfica. 27 (53): 5–81. ISSN 0031-0581. JSTOR 41888470.
  82. ^ Machuca, Paulina (2019). "To make tuba in Mexico and the Philippines. Four centuries of shared history". EncArtes. 2 (3): 214–225. doi:10.29340/en.v2n3.82.
  83. ^ Slack, Edward R. (2009). "The Chinos in New Spain: A Corrective Lens for a Distorted Image". Journal of World History. 20 (1): 35–67. ISSN 1045-6007. JSTOR 40542720.
  84. ^ Leslie Bethell (1984). Leslie Bethell (ed.). The Cambridge History of Latin America. Vol. 2 of The Cambridge History of Latin America: Colonial Latin America. I-II (illustrated, reprint ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 21. ISBN 0521245168.
  85. ^ a b c d Rodríguez Chávez, Ernesto; Cobo, Salvador (2012), Extranjeros residentes en México: Una aproximación cuantitativa con base en los registros administrativos del INM (PDF), México: Institution Nacional de Migración, archived from the original (PDF) on 12 June 2013, retrieved 28 September 2013
  86. ^ Wade, Lizzie (17 April 2018). "Latin America's lost histories revealed in modern DNA". Science. Retrieved 14 July 2021.
  87. ^ "Mexico".
  88. ^ Meyer, Jean. "Los franceses en Mexico durante el siglo XIX" (PDF). El Colegio de Michoacán. p. 17. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 January 2014. Retrieved 26 April 2016.
  89. ^ Samuel L. Baily; Eduardo José Míguez (2003). Mass Migration to Modern Latin America. Rowman & Littlefield. p. xiv. ISBN 978-0-8420-2831-8. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  90. ^ "Mexique". France Diplomatie : : Ministère de l'Europe et des Affaires étrangères.
  91. ^ a b OECD. "International Migration Database". stats.oecd.org.
  92. ^ Alma Durán-Merk (2007). Identifying Villa Carlota: German Settlements in Yucatán, México, During the Second Empire. Augsburg: Universität Augsburg.
  93. ^ Alma Durán-Merk (2008a). Nur deutsche Elite für Yukatan? Neue Ergebnisse zur Migrationsforschung während des Zweiten mexikanischen Kaiserreiches. Only "Selected" German Immigrants in Yucatán? Recent Findings about the Colonization Policy of the Second Mexican Empire. In: OPUS Augsburg, <http://opus.bibliothek.uni-augsburg.de/volltexte/2008/1320/pdf/Duran_Merk_Selected_German_Migration.pdf.
  94. ^ Alma Durán-Merk (2008b): Los colonos alemanes en Yucatán durante el Segundo Imperio Mexicano. In: OPUS Augsburg, http://opus.bibliothek.uni-augsburg.de/volltexte/2008/1329/pdf/Duran_Merk_Colonos_alemanes_Yucatán.pdf.
  95. ^ A full list with the more than 120 names of the families who colonized "Villa Carlota" as well as the names of the officers and organizers of these colonization program, can be found in: Alma Durán-Merk (2009). Villa Carlota. Colonias alemanas en Yucatán. Mérida: CEPSA/Instituto de Cultura de Yucatán/ CONACULTA, ISBN 978-607-7824-02-2.
  96. ^ Canal Once (12 April 2012). "Los que llegaron - Alemanes (11/04/2012)". Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 – via YouTube.
  97. ^ Pérez Ortiz, César; Eliseo, López Cortés. "Etnografía situacional de la memoria histórica de la región de Los Altos de Jalisco, México" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 March 2016. Retrieved 14 August 2023.
  98. ^ "Storie mobili" (in Italian). p. 83. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  99. ^ "Russians in Mexico". publimetro.com.mx. 30 June 2011.
  100. ^ Wang, Sijia; Ray, Nicolas; Rojas, Winston; Parra, Maria V.; Bedoya, Gabriel; Gallo, Carla; Poletti, Giovanni; Mazzotti, Guido; Hill, Kim; Hurtado, Ana M.; Camrena, Beatriz; Nicolini, Humberto; Klitz, William; Barrantes, Ramiro; Molina, Julio A. (21 March 2008). "Geographic Patterns of Genome Admixture in Latin American Mestizos". PLOS Genetics. 4 (3): e1000037. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1000037. ISSN 1553-7404. PMC 2265669. PMID 18369456.
  101. ^ "As Spain's Economy Worsens, Young Adults Flock to Mexico for Jobs - New America Media". newamericamedia.org. Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 23 November 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  102. ^ Flannery, Nathaniel Parish. "As Spain Falters, Spaniards Look to Latin America". Forbes.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Alfaro-Velcamp, Theresa. "Arab "Amirka": Exploring Arab diasporas in Mexico and the United States." Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 31.2 (2011): 282-295.
  • Berninger, Dieter George. La inmigración en México (1821–1857), trans. Roberto Gómez Ciriza. Mexico City: SEP-SETENTAS 1974.
  • Breceda Pérez, Jorge Antonio. "Ciudadanos y extranjeros en México, análisis crítico de la inequidad normativa en materia de extranjería en la Constitución Política de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos." (2018).
  • Buchenau, Jürgen. "Small numbers, great impact: Mexico and its immigrants, 1821-1973." Journal of American Ethnic History (2001): 23–49.
  • Buchenau, Jürgen. "The Limits of the Cosmic Race: Immigrant and Nation in Mexico, 1850–1950." Immigration and National Identities in Latin America (2014): 66–90.
  • Burden, David K., ed. "Reform Before La Reforma: Liberals, Conservatives and the Debate over Immigration, 1846–1855." Mexican *Studies/Estudios Mexicanos 23.2 (2007): 283–316.
  • Burden, David K. "La Idea Salvadora: Immigration and Colonization Politics in Mexico, 1821–1857". Doctoral dissertation. University of California, Santa Barbara, 2005.
  • Chang, Jason Oliver. Chino: anti-Chinese racism in Mexico, 1880-1940. University of Illinois Press, 2017.
  • Covert, Lisa Pinley. San Miguel de Allende: Mexicans, foreigners, and the making of a world heritage site. U of Nebraska Press, 2017.
  • Fitzgerald, David. "Nationality and migration in modern Mexico." Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 31.1 (2005): 171–191.
  • Garc'a, Jerry. Looking Like the Enemy: Japanese Mexicans, the Mexican State, and US Hegemony, 1897-1945. University of Arizona Press, 2014.
  • González-Murphy, Laura Valeria. Protecting immigrant rights in Mexico: Understanding the state-civil society nexus. Routledge, 2013.
  • Gonzalez-Murphy, Laura V., and Rey Koslowski. "Understanding Mexico's changing immigration Laws." Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. Mexico Institute, http://www. wilsoncenter. org/sites/default/files/G0NZALEZ 20 (2011): 2526.
  • González-Murphy, Laura V., and Rey Koslowski. "Entendiendo el cambio a las leyes de inmigración de México." Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Mexican Institute. Disponible en: Disponible en: https://bit Archived 19 February 2022 at the Wayback Machine. ly/2rSN2YG (consultado el 4 de febrero de 2018) (2011).
  • González Navarro, Moisés. Los extranjeros en México, y los mexicanos en el extranjero, 1820-1970. Mexico City: El Colegio de México 1993.
  • Gurwitz, Beatrice D. "Italian Immigrants and the Mexican Nation: The Cusi Family in Michoacán (1885–1938)." Immigrants & Minorities 33.2 (2015): 93–116.
  • Jingsheng, Dong. "Chinese emigration to Mexico and the Sino-Mexico relations before 1910." Estudios Internacionales (2006): 75–88.
  • Kim, Hahkyung. "Korean Immigrants' Place in the Discourse of Mestizaje: A History of Race-Class Dynamics and Asian Immigration in Yucatán, Mexico." Revista Iberoamericana (2012).
  • Pani, Erika. Para pertenecer a la gran familia mexicana:: Procesos de naturalización en el siglo XIX. El Colegio de Mexico AC, 2015.
  • Pani, Erika. "Ciudadanos precarios. Naturalización y extranjería en el México decimonónico." Historia Mexicana (2012): 627–674.
  • Pla, Dolores, et al. Extranjeros en México: Bibliografía. Mexico City: INAH 1993.
  • Weis, Robert. "Immigrant Entrepreneurs, Bread, and Class Negotiation in Postrevolutionary Mexico City." Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos 25.1 (2009): 71–100.
  • Yankelevich, Pablo. "Mexico for the Mexicans: Immigration, national sovereignty and the promotion of mestizaje." The Americas 68.3 (2012): 405–436.
[edit]