White Immigrant Merchants, the U.S. Mexican Population, and Middleman Entrepreneurship in the Early Twentieth-Century American West

Q2 Social Sciences Sociological Focus Pub Date : 2023-05-16 DOI:10.1080/00380237.2023.2214747
R. L. Boyd
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Studies applying middleman minority theory to white immigrants’ retail enterprise in the United States overlook the possibility that, in the early twentieth-century American West, white immigrants were attracted into merchandizing by opportunities to exploit a sizable and colonized Mexican population. The present study investigates this possibility. Regression analyses of 1930 Census data show that foreign-born whites were most likely to become merchants in those western locations that once belonged to Mexico and had the largest Mexican populations, consistent with the proposition that white immigrants’ middleman retail entrepreneurship was supported by the U.S. Mexican population’s size and colonized status. The results extend internal colonization scholarship by inferring that Mexican populations in the West, similar to black populations in non-western cities, provided white immigrants with a minority consumer market that was leveraged into retail enterprise in the early twentieth century. Thus, white immigrants, like native “Anglos,” benefited from the Mexican population’s subordination.
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20世纪初美国西部的白人移民商人、美墨人口和中间人创业
摘要将中间人-少数群体理论应用于美国白人移民零售企业的研究忽略了这样一种可能性,即在20世纪初的美国西部,白人移民被剥削大量被殖民的墨西哥人口的机会吸引到商品化中。本研究调查了这种可能性。对1930年人口普查数据的回归分析显示,外国出生的白人最有可能成为那些曾经属于墨西哥、墨西哥人口最多的西部地区的商人,这与白人移民的中间商零售创业受到美墨人口规模和殖民地地位的支持的说法一致。研究结果扩展了内部殖民化研究,推断西方的墨西哥人口与非西方城市的黑人人口相似,为白人移民提供了一个少数族裔消费市场,该市场在20世纪初被杠杆化为零售企业。因此,白人移民,像土生土长的“盎格鲁人”一样,从墨西哥人口的从属地位中受益。
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来源期刊
Sociological Focus
Sociological Focus Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
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