4.2 Article

Strong Ties, Weak Ties, and Human Capital: Latino Immigrant Employment Outside the Enclave

Journal

RURAL SOCIOLOGY
Volume 74, Issue 2, Pages 241-269

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1549-0831.2009.tb00391.x

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This study focuses on the role of social ties and human capital in the integration of Latino immigrants into the local economy. This analysis extends earlier research by focusing on more rural contexts with limited labor-market. opportunities and less access to Social resources provided by coethnics. We reconsider conclusions of previous studies by focusing on areas with limited labor-market. Optimises and less access to resources provided by coethnics. Using data from in-depth interviews, focus-group discussions, and surveys of Former farmworkers in five rural communities in New York, we consider how individuals move front agricultural to other types of employment. Multinomial logit and ordinary least squares regression analyses confirm indications from our qualitative data that strong social ties, weak ties, and human capital all play distinctive parts in the economic integration of immigrants outside the ethnic enclave. These resources have the most positive impact. oil incomes when they contribute to file immigrants, self-reliance ill finding employment. This finding is consistent with observations front the social-network literature that those who are less reliant on strong social ties are better able to take advantage of a broader range of labor-market opportunities.

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