↑ Georgia Epidemiology Report. Volume 24 number 3, Provided by the Georgia Department of Human Resources
↑ Georgia Minority Health & Health Disparities Report The Melting Pot, Provided by the National Center for Primary Care at Morehouse School of Medicine, 2004
↑ Diabetes Health Resources. Provided by the Center for Disease Control
1 2 Hamilton, D., Fienup, M., Hayes-Bautista, D., & Hsu, P. (2024). 2024 Metro Latino GDP Report: Atlanta. blogs.callutheran.edu
1 2 Martínez, E. R., & López, G. (2018). An “incredible number of Latinos and Asians”: Media representations of racial and ethnic population change in Atlanta, Georgia. Journal of Communication Inquiry, 42(4), 313-333. https://doi.org/10.1177/0196859918792227
1 2 Ordway, D.-M. (2020, August 8). How the news media portray Latinos in stories and images: 5 studies to know. The Journalist's Resource.
↑ Rees, Martha W. 2001. How Many Are There? Ethnographic Estimates of Mexican Women in Atlanta, Georgia. Latino Workers in the Contemporary South. Proceedings of the Southern Anthropological Society. Arthur D. Murphy, Colleen Blanchard and Jennifer A. Hill, eds. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. Pp.36–43.
↑ Rees, Martha W., T. Danyael Miller and Mariposa Arillo 1998. Atlanta Latinas. Presented at the Center for Latin American and Hispanic Studies, 1997-1998 Lecture Series: Gender, Culture and *Politics in Latin America. Women and NAFTA. 14 May 1998.
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