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2006 AILF Annual Benefit A Salute to Mexican Americans | |||||||
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last updated May 04, 2007
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Marriott RivercenterSan Antonio, Texas June 23, 2006 6:30pm Reception | 7:30pm Dinner View the AILF 2006 Annual Benefit Event Supporters View the Benefit photos Join the American Immigration Law Foundation for our annual benefit dinner and awards program, where we will focus on the many contributions the United States has received from Mexican Americans. The over 20 million Mexican Americans in the U.S. represent both a powerful economic force and a signicant influence on American culture. These immigrants and their children can be found in all aspects of our society. AILF salutes their achievements.
Instant Immigrants
Progress despite Harsh Working Conditions Nonetheless, Mexican immigration to the U.S., both legal and illegal, climbed steeply during the 1950's. More than 300,000 Mexican Americans served in the U.S. armed forces, earning them military honors as well as new-found skills. They formed a number of social, political, and service organizations, including the Mexican American Political Association (MAPA) and the American G.I. Forum. Such organizations helped Mexican Americans fight poverty, lack of education, and discrimination. Gross humanitarian violations of bracero employers, brought the program to an end in 1964. That same year, the first maquiladoras were established under the Border Industrialization Program (the mass employment of cheap labor along the Mexican border by U.S. companies. The largest increase of maquiladoras occurred in 1982 after devaluation of the Mexican currency.) Growth and Achievement
There are now more than 20 million Mexican Americans in the U.S., constituting fifty-eight per cent of the entire Latino population. The majority of the Mexican population in the U.S. is composed of either immigrants or first generation Americans. Today, in the midst of the largest wave of immigration in U.S. history, roughly one in four immigrants in the U.S. is of Mexican decent. In fact, by the last decade of the 20th Century, there were more legal immigrants from Mexico alone than from all of the countries of Europe combined. This large number of Mexican Americans represents powerful economic forces and socio-cultural practices. Forever to their credit, Mexican Americans have achieved all this while maintaining a strong cultural and family heritage.
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