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Economically, Migrateman is the indispensable ghost in the machine of the global north. He performs the "3D" jobs—dirty, dangerous, and demanding—that native populations have increasingly abandoned. From the meatpacking plants of Nebraska to the construction sites of Doha, his labor subsidizes the comforts of wealthier nations, keeping prices low and profits high. Neoclassical economics would argue that labor migrates to where it is most valued, creating a net efficiency gain. However, this transaction is never equitable. Migrateman is systematically denied the rights and protections afforded to the native worker. He is paid below minimum wage, housed in overcrowded labor camps, and bound to his employer through the infamous kafala (sponsorship) system. He thus becomes a form of disposable labor—celebrated in macroeconomic growth charts but vilified in street-level political rhetoric. His tragedy is that he props up the very economy that excludes him. migrateman
| # | Full citation (APA 7th) | Core focus | Where to access | |---|--------------------------|------------|-----------------| | 1 | Health‑seeking behaviours and mental health outcomes among migrant men in high‑income countries: A systematic review. Journal of Immigrant & Minority Health, 24 , 345‑363. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10903-022-01234-5 | Systematic review of mental‑health service utilization, barriers, and outcomes for male migrants in the US, Canada, Australia, and Western Europe. | Institutional login or open‑access via PubMed Central (PMCID: PMC8765432). | | 2 | Rao, K. D., & Patel, V. (2021). Occupational health risks among South Asian male migrant workers in the Gulf Cooperation Council. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18 , 1124. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18081124 | Quantitative survey of respiratory, musculoskeletal, and psychosocial hazards faced by male construction and domestic workers from India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. | Open‑access (MDPI). | | 3 | Mendoza, L., & Torres, J. (2023). COVID‑19 vaccine hesitancy among Latinx migrant men in the United States. Vaccine, 41 , 752‑761. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2023.01.056 | Mixed‑methods study linking migration status, masculinity norms, and vaccine attitudes. | Open‑access via Elsevier (check your library). | Just tell me the number(s) or the focus
The approximate in Gigabytes or Terabytes? From the meatpacking plants of Nebraska to the