Abstract
The study of migrations in Central America has become a topic of considerable interest and debate in the past few years both because of the interesting number of people involved and because of the increasing number of countries concerned with these movement networks (Lippman and Diaz-Briquets, 1981:8–11). Underlying these discussions about migration is the very real fact that migration “can profoundly alter a community or an entire country within a short time” (Weeks, 1981:149), and recent migrations into and out of Belize support this contention.
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