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Economic Life of Mexican Beach Vendors

Acapulco, Puerto Vallarta, and Cabo San Lucas
Authors:
Publisher:
 2012

Summary

Economic Life of Mexican Beach Vendors: Acapulco, Puerto Vallarta, and Cabo San Lucas is based on interviews with 82 men and 84 women who vend their wares on beaches in three Mexican tourist centers. Assuming that some people may actively choose self-employment in the informal or semi-informal economy, the employment and educational aspirations of the vendors and their levels of satisfaction with their work are explored. Most of the vendors had other family members who were also vendors, and 75 (45.2 percent) had 5 or more family members who vended, most usually on Mexican beaches. The vendors are aware of the forces of globalization (though they do not express these forces in those words), as revealed by their responses to questions as to how the current world economic recession has affected them. The beach vendors live in essentially segregated neighborhoods that can be considered apartheid-like, far from the tourist zones.

Most of the vendors or their parents are rural-to-urban migrants and cross ethnic, linguistic, and economic borders as they migrate to and work in what have been called transnational social spaces. Of the vendors interviewed, 82 (49.4 percent) speak an indigenous language, and of these, 60 (73.2 percent) speak Nahuatl. The majority are from the state of Guerrero, but there were also Zapotec-speakers from Oaxaca. Both indigenous and non-indigenous women take part in beach vending. They are often wives, daughters, or sisters of male beach vendors, and they may be single, married, living in free union, or widowed. Their income is often of central importance to the household economy. This monograph aims to bring their stories to tourists and to scholars and students of tourism development and /or the informal or semi-informal economy in Mexican tourist centers.

Keywords



Bibliographic data

Edition
1/2012
Copyright year
2012
ISBN-Print
978-0-7391-7764-8
ISBN-Online
978-0-7391-7765-5
Publisher
Lexington, Lanham
Language
English
Pages
208
Product type
Book Titles

Table of contents

ChapterPages
    1. Contents No access
    2. Acknowledgments No access
  1. Introduction No access Pages 1 - 20
  2. Ch01. Wasted Lives? No access Pages 21 - 38
  3. Ch02. Levels of Contentment among the Beach Vendors No access Pages 39 - 58
  4. Ch03. The Family Legacy of the Beach Vendors No access Pages 59 - 78
  5. Ch04. Globalization and the Increase of Beach Vendors No access Pages 79 - 96
  6. Ch05. De Facto Residential Apartheid No access Pages 97 - 114
  7. Ch06. Indigenous Vendors No access Pages 115 - 140
  8. Ch07. Women Vendors No access Pages 141 - 160
  9. Conclusion No access Pages 161 - 166
  10. Appendix I No access Pages 167 - 170
  11. Appendix II No access Pages 171 - 184
  12. Bibliography No access Pages 185 - 198
  13. Index No access Pages 199 - 206
  14. About the Author No access Pages 207 - 208

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