TY - JOUR
T1 - The Japanese agricultural workers' program
T2 - Race, labor, and cold war diplomacy in the fields, 1956-1965
AU - Loza, Mireya
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 by the Pacific Coast Branch, American Historical Association.
PY - 2017/11
Y1 - 2017/11
N2 - In the early 1950s, California growers' associations were gravely concerned about their heavy reliance on Mexico for guestworkers, given the potential end of the program. In order to maintain a controlled labor pool, California growers introduced a new guestworker model that could possibly supplant the Bracero Program. They placed pressure on government officials to approve the Japanese Agricultural Workers' Program (JAWP). In an attempt to sanitize the program, growers' discourses around the JAWP intersected with emerging visions of ''model minorities'' creating a ''model bracero,'' who was neither Mexican nor a traditional laborer in the eyes of growers. Additionally, growers often insisted these Japanese workers were ''students'' learning agricultural technology and U.S. democracy. In response to these varied diplomatic representations, activists, journalists, and communities sought to uncover what they saw as another form of racialized worker exploitation by calling attention to first-hand accounts of the Japanese guestworkers.
AB - In the early 1950s, California growers' associations were gravely concerned about their heavy reliance on Mexico for guestworkers, given the potential end of the program. In order to maintain a controlled labor pool, California growers introduced a new guestworker model that could possibly supplant the Bracero Program. They placed pressure on government officials to approve the Japanese Agricultural Workers' Program (JAWP). In an attempt to sanitize the program, growers' discourses around the JAWP intersected with emerging visions of ''model minorities'' creating a ''model bracero,'' who was neither Mexican nor a traditional laborer in the eyes of growers. Additionally, growers often insisted these Japanese workers were ''students'' learning agricultural technology and U.S. democracy. In response to these varied diplomatic representations, activists, journalists, and communities sought to uncover what they saw as another form of racialized worker exploitation by calling attention to first-hand accounts of the Japanese guestworkers.
KW - Bracero Program
KW - California
KW - Japanese AgriculturalWorkers' Program
KW - Japanese migration
KW - JapaneseAmerican Citizens League
KW - agriculture
KW - guestworkers
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U2 - 10.1525/phr.2017.86.4.661
DO - 10.1525/phr.2017.86.4.661
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85033360896
SN - 0030-8684
VL - 86
SP - 661
EP - 690
JO - Pacific Historical Review
JF - Pacific Historical Review
IS - 4
ER -