<p>Migration between the United States and Mexico is often compared to the river that runs along the border: a &#x201C;flow&#x201D; of immigrants a &#x201C;flood&#x201D; of documented and undocumented workers a &#x201C;dam&#x201D; that has broken. Scholars journalists and novelists often tell this story from a south-to-north perspective emphasizing Mexican migration to the United States and the American response to the influx of people crossing its borders.<br/><br/>In <i>Caught in the Current</i> Irvin Ibarg&#xFC;en offers a Mexico-centered history of migration in the mid-twentieth century. Drawing on Mexican periodicals and archival sources he explores how the Mexican state sought to manage US-bound migration. Ibarg&#xFC;en examines Mexico&#x2019;s efforts to blunt migration&#x2019;s impact on its economy social order and reputation at times even aiming to restrict the flow of migrants. As a transnational history the book highlights how Mexico&#x2019;s policies to moderate out-migration were contested by both the United States and migrants themselves dooming them to fail. Ultimately <i>Caught in the Current</i> reveals how both countries manipulated the border to impose control over a phenomenon that quickly escaped legal and political boundaries.</p>
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