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Photo by David BaconIn this video, called ” How Globalization Creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants,” writer and photographer David Bacon shows haunting conditions immigrant workers face in this 2009 lecture that’s still relevant today. Among the causes is the subsidizing of large grain corporations like Archer Daniels Midland, which undermines Mexican farmers’ ability to sell corn at a price that pays their expenses.
In addition, Bacon has two exhibits of photographs showing the conditions of migrant children working in the U.S.:
Making visible through images the living conditions of young Mexicans who work in the fields of California, From October 3 to November 1, in the entrance hall of the Economics Faculty, UNAM, Mexico City, DF
Surviving: the life of farmworkers and their families in the U.S., From October 8 to November 8, City Hall of Oaxaca de Juarez, Plaza de Danza, Centro Historico, Oaxaca
“The majority of people have the idea that by going to the U.S. you rake in the dollars and everything is easy to get, when in reality people have to live under trees, in houses of cardboard, or outdoors, in order to send money to their families”...
The positive effects of the Grand Alliance shipping consortium’s move to the Port of Tacoma were again showing in port container volume figures released this week.
Those figures show the port handled 195,718 container units last month, some 36.9 percent greater than the same month last year.
The Grand Alliance, a shipping partnership among four lines, NYK, OOCL, Hapag-Lloyd and Zim, moved its operations to the Port of Tacoma from Seattle in July.
Meanwhile at the Port of Seattle, the departure of the Grand Alliance is having a noticeable effect. September container numbers there were down 15.1 percent. Collectively, the container numbers at the ports of Tacoma and Seattle are up 9.4 percent for September.
More at the News Tribune
In the wake of a strip club spending scandal, the Port of Oakland reshuffled its upper management today and placed an executive at the center of the controversy on paid leave.
Acting Port of Oakland Director Deborah Ale Flint said Maritime Director James Kwon, who is still in China on a port-related business trip, was put on paid leave.
Kwon, port officials said, in 2008 expensed approximately $4,500 for a tab run up in a strip club in Houston. It has also been reported that Kwon expensed haircuts, wine, massage parlors and golf outings.
The Port’s management shuffle came after the Oakland Port’s director, Omar Benjamin, was placed on paid leave yesterday. The reason for Benjamin’s leave was not disclosed.
More in the San Francisco Business Times
Source: Wicked Local
Source: Times Union
Source: KMJN
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Source: The New Yorker
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