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History of the Central Americans in Los Angeles : ウィキペディア英語版 | History of the Central Americans in Los Angeles
The City of Los Angeles includes a prominent Central American population. As of 2010 it is the second largest Latino and Hispanic ethnic group in Los Angeles after the Mexican-Americans.〔Segura, p. (8 ).〕 The largest Central American groups were the Guatemalans and Salvadorans.〔Lopez, Popkin, and Telles, p. (279 ).〕 ==History== The first Central Americans arrived in the 1940s.〔 In the 1970s the population of Central Americans were evenly distributed between the national origins and was relatively small. David E. Lopez, Eric Popkin, and Edward Telles, authors of "Central Americans: At the Bottom: Struggling to Get Ahead", stated that the Central American groups with "runaway" growth were the Guatemalans and Salvadorans. By 1980 the Guatemalan and Salvadoran populations were the largest Central American populations in Greater Los Angeles. Between 1980 and 1990 these groups increased almost by fivefold.〔Lopez, Popkin, and Telles, p. (281 ).〕 Many Salvadorans were fleeing the Salvadoran Civil War.〔Bermudez, Esmeralda. "(In L.A., speaking 'Mexican' to fit in )." ''Los Angeles Times''. November 3, 2008. Retrieved on February 1, 2014.〕 In 2008 Esmeralda Bermudez of the ''Los Angeles Times'' wrote that by then there were strong relations between the Salvadoran community and the Mexican community, noting that they "have mingled at work, school and church for nearly three decades; they have intermarried, baptized each other's children and cried at each other's funerals."〔 As of 2010 the majority of Los Angeles's Central American population had arrived during the late 1970s and the late 1980s. Due to civil wars and political persecution, many Guatemalans and Salvadorans arrived in the 1980s.〔
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