Abstract

This work analyses the high precarious scenarios that predominate in the abodes where migrant rural workers from the most vulnerable sectors in Mexico live in. Primarily from a qualitative perspective, we address similarities and differences in two study contexts by correlating ethnographic experiences in the large agricultural enterprise in Sinaloa and entrepreneurship ventures in the Michoacan plateau in order to characterize the diversity of places where everyday life is replicated. For the analysis, space-room factors and conditions are referred to as categories linked to the study object to contextualize how it affects human relations and conduct. At first glance, it was considered unnecessary to investigate what was obvious at first sight, however, a second inquiry stage in terms of thick description proposes to unravel how conflict-tolerance-adaptation is endured in human relations to form an “efficient” housing system so actors can continue with an agricultural labor project.

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