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Finding America's Farmworkers : Reaching Out in North Carolina - Michael Durbin

Finding America's Farmworkers

Reaching Out in North Carolina

By: Michael Durbin

Paperback | 24 June 2024

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Imagine you are a fit young man with a wife and child and a job that pays just enough to keep your family from going hungry. Then you learn of a job that pays a remarkable ten to twenty times as much. The catch? You must leave your family for most of every year for the rest of your working life. 

Hundreds of thousands of Mexican men make this sacrifice to plant, cultivate, and harvest crops in the United States on an H-2A visa. Beyond the pain of family separation, many also endure working and living conditions few US workers would ever tolerate.

In this fully revised and updated edition of Finding America's Farmworkers, outreach worker and blogger Michael Durbin introduces us to men and women representing all corners of the H-2A community: Veteran farmworkers and new recruits. The molecular biologist turned outreach master. The grower emerging from bankruptcy. The traumatized migrant housing inspector. And more. 

Filled with personal stories, some humorous and some tragic, this engaging and informative book paints a vivid portrait of a little known and utterly essential world. It's for anyone who eats food and is curious about where it comes from.

Industry Reviews

"A powerful, well-researched survey of the lives of agricultural guest workers." -- Kirkus Reviews

At its inception in 1987, the H-2A visa program certified just over 40 positions for temporary nonimmigrant workers to enter the United States. Today, the number of so-called guest workers, most of whom are Mexican men who leave their families for seasonal crop work, has soared to more than 300,000. This look into the lives of seasonal agricultural workers in eastern North Carolina begins in Mexico as men like 60-year-old Domingo lvarez begin a multiday transnational bus trip from their home to the Tar Heel State.

While the contributions of guest workers to the American economy receive ample coverage ("We need them. They need us," Durbin writes), what makes this book stand out is its deeply personal narrative. Readers learn about the rompecabezas de enredo (handmade entanglement puzzles made from wires and cords) that one older migrant makes for the journey; social dynamics that exist inside worker communities (where the mayordomo is "the most-senior member of a grower's crew...who can speak enough English to receive instructions from the grower, or patr³n"); and how workers communicate with family via Facebook and WhatsApp messages.

While many note how work in the United States has provided them with "a better economic situation," the workers' living conditions and tenuous employment, exacerbated by abusive growers, have also bred a culture of "fear of retaliation" among many who declined to have their names published. (Although he uses pseudonyms, Durbin assures readers that the workers referenced are not composites, but real people he interviewed or witnessed firsthand.) He observes that, as sincere as nonprofit organizations (particularly the Episcopalian ministry that the author tagged along with while researching the book) may be in their desire to assist workers, their needs far outweigh the available charity. One worker, for example, was given a bag of ground coffee from a local church, but it sat unused on his shelf, since he had no way to brew it. 

Using interviews with more than 80 farmworkers, in addition to the "few growers willing to speak with me," Durbin has assembled a revealing look into the lived experiences of guest workers. The author is nonpartisan in his analysis of the complexities of U.S. immigration policy; while emphasizing the "extraordinary sacrifices" made by farmworkers with H-2A visas, Durbin makes a compelling case that "we as a nation can honor that sacrifice" by improving guest workers' working and living conditions.

The author of multiple books on financial derivatives who has taught at Duke University's Fuqua School of Business and spent a career in software engineering for the banking industry, Durbin presents poignant anecdotes accompanied by impressive quantitative analyses backed by more than 20 pages of citations and bibliographic entries. Graphs, charts, and other visual aids accompany each chapter, making the more analytical passages accessible for nonacademic readers.

A powerful, well-researched survey of the lives of agricultural guest workers.

-- Kirkus Reviews

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