In 1933 Congress granted American laborers the right of collective
bargaining, but farmworkers got no New Deal. Cindy Hahamovitch's
pathbreaking account of migrant farmworkers along the Atlantic
Coast shows how growers enlisted the aid of the state in an
unprecedented effort to keep their fields well stocked with
labor.
This is the story of the farmworkers--Italian immigrants from
northeastern tenements, African American laborers from the South,
and imported workers from the Caribbean--who came to work in the
fields of New Jersey, Georgia, and Florida in the decades after
1870. These farmworkers were not powerless, the author argues, for
growers became increasingly open to negotiation as their crops
ripened in the fields. But farmers fought back with padrone or
labor contracting schemes and 'work-or-fight' forced-labor
campaigns. Hahamovitch describes how growers' efforts became more
effective as federal officials assumed the role of padroni,
supplying farmers with foreign workers on demand.
Today's migrants are as desperate as ever, the author concludes,
not because poverty is an inevitable feature of modern agricultural
work, but because the federal government has intervened on behalf
of growers, preventing farmworkers from enjoying the fruits of
their labor.