Jeffrey Marcos GarcIlazo received hisdoctorate from the University of California at SantaBarbara and was assistant professor at the University ofCalifornia, Irvine, USA before his untimely death in 2001. Vicki L. Ruiz is professor of history and Chicano/Latino studies at the University of California, Irvine, USA.
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"[Traqueros] makes an important contribution to our understanding of migratory workers and the social conditions of working class family life, and it offers a detailed and nuanced portrait of railroad work in the era of Mexican immigrant dominance in southwestern track work."--Southwestern Historical Quarterly "Garcilazo found a fascinating story of labor migration, community formation, familial relations, and social history. . . . The writing is top notch. . . . In writing the first comprehensive treatment of the traqueros, Garcilazo has broken considerable new academic ground."--Montana: The Magazine of Western History "Garcilazo has made a powerful contribution to the historiography of the railroads as well as the history of Mexican workers in the United States. . . . [I]t is refreshing at a time when analyses of the rise of big business and railroads operate at a level of abstraction that has left the picks and shovels of common laborers barely discernible. Traqueros are an invisible labor force no longer."--H-SHGAPE, H-Net Review "Traqueros is a significant contribution to the scholarly literature of United States labor history, Chicano social history, and ethnic labor history."--Juan Gomez-Quinones, author of Chicano Politics "Traqueros is particularly important because of the originality of the research from numerous archives. Several interviews further enrich the work. Highly recommended."--Dionicio Valdes, author of Barrios Nortenos "Jeffrey Garcilazo's book is a signal contribution to the field of Mexican American history--it will long stand in the historiography as the first book in this area of Chicano history from which later efforts will depart."--Roberto Calderon, author of Mexican Coal Mining Labor in Texas and Coahuila, 1880-1930 "A meticulous researcher, Garcilazo has gathered a stunning array of archival materials on Mexican railroad workers. From his sources, he reconstructs episodes of daily life from lonely encampments to spontaneous strikes. His arguments on economic stratification, ethnic enclaves, family ties, and identity are solidly grounded in primary documents. Never overstepping the bounds of his evidence, Garcilazo situates traqueros within the larger context of American working class history and his keen insights have retained their currency over the passage of time."--from the foreword by Vicki L. Ruiz

