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Getting Ahead: Social Mobility, Public Housing, and Immigrant Networks

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Honorable Mention, 2014 Distinguished Contribution to Research Award presented by the Latina/o Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association

Getting Ahead tells the compelling stories of Latin-American immigrant women living in public housing in two Boston-area neighborhoods. Silvia Domínguez argues that these immigrant women parlay social ties that provide support and leverage to develop networks and achieve social positioning to get ahead. Through a rich ethnographic account and in-depth interviews, the strong voices of these women demonstratehow they successfully negotiate the world and achieve social mobility through their own individual agency, skillfullynavigating both constraints and opportunities.
Domínguez makes it clear that many immigrant women are able to develop the social support needed for a rich social life, and leverage ties that open options for them to develop their social and human capital. However, she also shows that factors such as neighborhood and domestic violence and the unavailability of social services leave many women without the ability to strategize towards social mobility. Ultimately, Domínguez makes important local and international policy recommendations on issue ranging from public housing to world labor visas, demonstrating how policy can help to improve the lives of these and other low-income people.

278 pages, Hardcover

First published December 20, 2010

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269 reviews63 followers
October 23, 2017
Getting Ahead: Social Mobility, Public Housing, and Immigrant Networks focuses on the lived experiences of socially isolated, low-income immigrant Latin American immigrant women with limited access to resources to support social mobility. With case studies from two Boston-area neighborhoods, Dominguez negates the assimilationist perspective that US migration policy fronts through education and employment, highlighting
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