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Forbidden Workers: Illegal Chinese Immigrants and American Labor

di Peter Kwong

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Hailed by the Philadelphia Inquirer as "a must-read," Forbidden Workers tells for the first time the full story of recent Chinese immigration to this country. Widely praised from the Wall Street Journal to Asian Week, the book uses the Chinese experience to shed light on broader issues of immigration from countries around the world. Author Peter Kwong has interviewed countless immigrant workers, activists, Chinatown powerbrokers, and "snakeheads" (smugglers who bring immigrants to the United States) and has traveled to China to talk with families of immigrants. The result is an unprecedented look at an invisible community within American society--and at a billion-dollar industry whose commodity is workers who labor under conditions approaching modern slavery.… (altro)
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While reading histories of the Chinese in America, I became curious about the illegal side of this subject. I found this book by accident and picked it up. It provides an interesting and easy to read account of groups that facilitate illegal emigration from China -- mainly from Fuzhou -- to mostly New York and California, and of the lives the immigrants then live. The illegals incur debts of $30,000+ to "snakeheads," who arrange for transport and entry and then brutally enforce payment. Because of their illegal status and threats from their creditors, Chinese illegals usually accept jobs that pay less than the minimum wage and violate American labor standards, for which they have no legal recourse. The book talks about the history and socio-economics in China that lead to the desire of the people to become illegal immigrants and burden their families with such huge debts. It also points the finger at the Taiwanese government and military as being involved in the trade and at the PRC leaders of being aware of the activities and ignoring it. Once in America, the book goes into detail on the sweatshops and other conditions the illegals live through. But there is a clear agenda by the author expressing his views on how we need to protect the illegals with laws, etc. in order to better everyone in labor. Altogether this was a very interesting read until about the last two chapters that were full of how we need to bring back unions and other things we could do to protect the illegals. It’s worth picking up at the library if even just to open your eyes a little about the really horrible things that are done to people in the US. ( )
  autumnesf | May 20, 2008 |
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Hailed by the Philadelphia Inquirer as "a must-read," Forbidden Workers tells for the first time the full story of recent Chinese immigration to this country. Widely praised from the Wall Street Journal to Asian Week, the book uses the Chinese experience to shed light on broader issues of immigration from countries around the world. Author Peter Kwong has interviewed countless immigrant workers, activists, Chinatown powerbrokers, and "snakeheads" (smugglers who bring immigrants to the United States) and has traveled to China to talk with families of immigrants. The result is an unprecedented look at an invisible community within American society--and at a billion-dollar industry whose commodity is workers who labor under conditions approaching modern slavery.

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