Sentences with phrase «mexican immigrant women»

The birth rate for U.S. - born women decreased 6 % during these years, but the birth rate for foreign - born women plunged 14 % — more than it had declined over the entire 1990 - 2007 period.1 The birth rate for Mexican immigrant women fell even more, by 23 %.
One per - centers are taking it on the chin at the movies these days with recent releases like «The Founder» and «Get Out,» and now the latest cinematic smack out of Sundance, Beatriz at Dinner, a sly and telling exposé of class in America as seen through the eyes of a Mexican immigrant woman named Beatriz (Salma Hayek, «Savages»), a new - age holistic healer who works at a cancer rehabilitation center, does private massage therapy on the side, lives with her pet goats and drives a broken - down Volkswagen.

Not exact matches

However, the data reveal that the number of foreign - born Mexican women giving birth in the last 12 months (presumably within the U.S.) is only 7 % of all foreign - born women Mexican immigrants.
Mothers in the program are mostly Mexican immigrants; though their culture prioritizes family support, the women often find themselves isolated from their extended family, Garcia said.
But scratch that familiar surface and the evening was one that quietly made history, not only giving us the first Best Picture winner featuring a woman's love affair with a fish, but also a Best Picture from a Mexican immigrant about a black woman, gay man and a disabled woman all teaming up to fight the real monster: white male tyranny.
At a community action group comprised of Mexican immigrants, one woman explains of the terrible ordeal she and her daughters went through to get across the border, and her utter determination to make this new life for herself and her family speaks volumes about the significance of multi-cultural communities and building homes away from home.
She performed her solo, «La lengua, the tongue of Cortès,» both in the US and the Netherlands and directed a series of performances based on Mexican legends: «Weeping Women and War» with Pomona College students,; «La Llorona, Weeping Women on Skid Row» with the LAPD, which was performed on Skid Row and at a national conference on women and poverty at Scripps College, and «La Llorona, Weeping Women of Echo Park» with a group of Latina immigrant women in Echo Women and War» with Pomona College students,; «La Llorona, Weeping Women on Skid Row» with the LAPD, which was performed on Skid Row and at a national conference on women and poverty at Scripps College, and «La Llorona, Weeping Women of Echo Park» with a group of Latina immigrant women in Echo Women on Skid Row» with the LAPD, which was performed on Skid Row and at a national conference on women and poverty at Scripps College, and «La Llorona, Weeping Women of Echo Park» with a group of Latina immigrant women in Echo women and poverty at Scripps College, and «La Llorona, Weeping Women of Echo Park» with a group of Latina immigrant women in Echo Women of Echo Park» with a group of Latina immigrant women in Echo women in Echo Park.
Rather than doing that, Mexico City - born photographer Amanda Gutiérrez seeks to document her surroundings as she ventures through Brooklyn's Sunset Park, focusing both on her «subjective experience as a Mexican woman living and working in New York» and painting a photographic portrait of the neighborhood's Mexican immigrant community.
Margarita Cabrera's socio - political multi-media art combines studio practice and social activism, often as a means of «venerating the lives of Mexican immigrants, paying careful attention to the contributions of the women who make consumer goods that are sold in the United States.»
He also took advantage of the country's prejudice against blacks and immigrants by printing that marijuana - crazed negroes were raping white women and by painting pictures of lazy, pot - smoking Mexicans.
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