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Wiley InterScience

Global Networks

Global Networks

Volume 5 Issue 2, Pages 129 - 146

Published Online: 29 Mar 2005

© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd & Global Networks Partnership



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The transnational politics of the Tomato King: meaning and impact
MICHAEL PETER SMITH 1 MATT BAKKER 2
  1 Department of Human and Community Development, University of California, Davis, California USA
  2 Department of Sociology, University of California, Davis, California USA
Copyright 2005 Blackwell Publishing Ltd & Global Networks Partnership

ABSTRACT

Abstract In this article we deploy transnational ethnography to explore the transnational electoral politics by which Andrés Bermúdez, a successful tomato grower and labour contractor from Winters, California, who came to be called 'the Tomato King', was elected mayor of the municipality of Jerez in the Mexican state of Zacatecas. We seek to explain the meaning of his transnational electoral victory and its impact on the role of 'the migrant' as a new social actor in Mexican political development. We thus situate the Bermudista phenomenon in the context of the literature on migrant transnational politics. We hope to move the literature on migrant political transnationalism forward by advancing an agency-oriented perspective that incorporates both the politics of representation of 'el migrante' in transnational electoral campaigns and the emerging dynamics of transnational coalition politics. Our approach underlines the need to carefully historicize the relationship between transnationalism and citizenship - namely, to map the contingency and agency underlying the changing practices of states, migrants, and transnational institutional networks vis-à-vis questions of transnational citizenship. This is best done by paying close attention to the actual social and political practices whereby human agents pursue historically specific political projects that extend the practices of citizenship across borders.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1471-0374.2005.00111.x About DOI

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