Index

Please note that page numbers are not accurate for the e-book edition.

Abrego, Leisy, 89–90

adoption of children of deported parents, 159, 162

Affordable Care Act (2010), 92, 178–79

AFL-CIO, 13, 15, 191, 197–98

African Americans: citizenship of, 10; criminalization and mass incarceration of, 15–18, 109; freedom to travel, 33, 34; Jim Crow system, 2, 14, 27, 38; removal from the labor force, 18, 38–39; slavery, 9, 30, 31, 32, 183; and welfare reform, 193. See also civil rights movement

African immigrants, 136

agriculture and US agricultural system: as employer of undocumented workers, 11, 13; and employer sanctions, 123; labor contracting, 52–53, 57, 68, 74–76, 123–24; labor shortages, 55, 126–27, 143; percentage of undocumented workers in, 118; productivity of American vs. migrant workers, 127; structural need for undocumented labor, 120–21; unsustainability of, 128–29. See also Bracero Program; labor recruitment and contracting; migrant workers

Agriprocessors plant raid, 117, 136–40

Alexander, Michelle, 15–18, 38–39

Alien Registration Act (1940), 59

American Baptist Church v. Thornburgh (1990), 88–89, 189

American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), 110–11

American workers, 121, 124–25, 127, 143

“amnesty,” 196

“anchor babies,” 159

Anguiano, Claudia, 170

Applied Research Center, 206–7

Arandas, Jalisco, Mexico, 52–54

Arizona, 3, 6, 84–85, 110–12, 141, 179, 194–95

Asian immigrants, 10–11, 28, 33–35, 120

Asiatic Barred Zone, 28

Associated Press, 207

asylum, 69, 88–90, 104, 189

attitudes about immigration: of European immigrants, 10; and freedom to travel, 40–41; immigrants as lawbreakers, 1, 15, 17–18, 67, 69, 201; media use of “illegal immigrant” term, 46–47, 206–7

Benton-Cohn, Katherine, 182

Berlin, Irving, 44–45

birth certificates, 93–94, 95

Border Crossing Cards, 71–72

border crossings, 73–76, 77–82, 154–58

border enforcement policies: border militarization, 62; harm to migrants from, 82–85; and migration patterns, 152, 204; as political issue, 192–93, 200–201; unintended consequences of, 185, 187

Border Patrol, 3–4, 54, 83–85, 100, 155

Border Patrol Search, Trauma, and Rescue (BORSTAR), 85

Border Security, Economic Opportunity and Immigration Modernization Act, 169, 180

Borjas, George, 149

Bracero Program, 11, 55–59, 63, 121–22, 135

Brazilian immigrants, 78

Brownell, Herbert, 58

Burmese immigrants, 136

Bush (George W.) administration: border enforcement under, 78–79; immigration agenda, 195–96, 198; immigration as political issue during, 194, 200; Secure Communities program, 107, 202; workplace raids under, 116–17

California: agricultural reliance on migrant labor, 11, 61, 121–22; California-Mexico border, 83–84, 85; immigrant-supported lifestyle in, 144–45; in-state tuition for undocumented students, 167–68; Operation Gatekeeper, 82–84, 193; Proposition 187, 192–93

California Landscape Contractors Association, 143

Camayd-Freixas, Erik, 69, 137–39

Canada, reentry through, 46

Cardin, Ben, 176

Caribbean islands, 42

Carl, Steven, 98

Catholic Church, 197

Central American immigrants: children detained and deported, 155–58; increase in number of, 48, 154, 156; journey to US border, 77–82; reasons for migrating, 64–69; temporary protected status for, 89–90; US policies leading to migration of, 158, 186–87, 189. See also Guatemalan immigrants

Central American Refugee Center (CARECEN), 189

Chacón, Oscar, 202

Chaparro, James, 106–7

Chavez, Leo, 101–2

Chavez-Thompson, Linda, 191

Chicano movement, 188–89

child-care industry, 144–47

children: border crossings made by, 74; child welfare system, 161–62; citizen children of undocumented parents, 140, 153; DACA program, 90, 174–79; detention and deportation of, 154–59; foster care, 159; immigration law regarding, 152; loss of parents to deportation, 158–62; public benefits eligibility, 92; school achievement of immigrants, 166–67; “transition to illegality,” 162–66. See also families; undocumented youth

Chinese Exclusion Act (1882), 11, 33, 46, 120

Chinese immigrants, 10–11, 28, 34–35, 120

Christianity and colonialism, 26, 29–32

citizenship: pathways to, 43, 168, 174, 177, 200–201, 205; by place of birth, 10, 35, 36; and race, 32–34, 183

citizens of US: children of undocumented parents, 143, 152–54; deportation of citizens of Mexican origin, 59; freedom to travel of, 40–41; jobs undesirable to, 118, 121, 124–25, 127, 143

civil disobedience, 170

civil rights movement: and 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act, 184–85; elimination of race-based discrimination, 35; on employer sanctions, 115–16; and freedom to travel, 33; and guest workers, 11, 60; and mass incarceration of African Americans and immigrants, 15–18; and racism, 2. See also African Americans

civil vs. criminal immigration violations, 98–100, 104–6, 106–7, 138–39, 203–4

Clark, Victor, 49–50, 51–52

Clinton administration, 144, 192–93

Colbert, Stephen, 125

colonialism, legacy of, 9, 26–29, 30–32, 37–38, 181–82

coming out as undocumented, 163–64, 170, 178

Compa, Lance, 133–34

company towns, 55

comprehensive immigration reform, 144, 169, 180, 189–92, 196

Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act (S.2611), 169

construction industry, 119, 130–33

consulting firms (political), 198–203

consumer benefits of illegality, 14, 101, 128, 142, 151, 181–82, 186–87

Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), 108–11

countries, assumptions about, 206

“coyotes,” 20–21, 57, 63–64, 68, 73, 81

critical legal studies, 24–25

cultural changes and immigration law, 2, 206–7

“culture of migration,” 56

A Day without a Mexican (film), 150

deaths of migrants, 3, 79, 83–85

Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), 90, 94, 153, 174–79, 204

De Genova, Nicholas, 19, 39, 116, 183

Democracy Corps, 199–200, 202

Democratic Party, 188, 193, 199–203. See also Obama, Barack

Department of Homeland Security (DHS), 100, 155, 178–79, 193–94

deportation: and Bracero Program, 57; of criminals vs. non-criminals, 106–7, 200, 204; deportee testimonies, 3–6; as disproportionally affecting Mexicans, 88; economic impact of, 149–50; effects on communities, 140, 150; for entry without inspection, 45, 53–55; of Europeans, 34; ICE quotas for, 106–7; of indigent immigrants, 42, 53, 59; and INS raids, 134–36; legal process of, 6–8, 103–6; of parents of citizen children, 158–62; racial justifications for, 183; statutes of limitations on, 45; traffic stops leading to, 97; of US citizens, 58; vs. voluntary departure and removal, 99–100, 104. See also immigration court system; reentry after removal; voluntary departure and removal

Detention and Removal Operations (DRO) of ICE, 106–7

detention for immigration violations, 99, 102, 103–6, 106–7, 108–12, 154–58, 158–62. See also incarceration; prison system

DHS. See Department of Homeland Security

Diamond, Jared, 28

Dillingham US Immigration Commission (1911), 183

discrimination, legalized, 15–18, 35–36, 154, 177, 184, 206

Division of Unaccompanied Children’s Services (DUCS), 155, 161

“documented illegal aliens,” 62

documenting an undocumented life, 178

documents. See fraudulent documents; specific types of documents (e.g., visas)

domestic workers, 144–47

Dominican immigrants, 78

DREAM (Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors) Act, 167–71, 168, 169, 172–74, 176, 180. See also children; undocumented youth

DREAMers, defined, 168

Dred Scott decision (1857), 33

driver’s licenses, 95–98, 163–64

Drop-the-I-Word campaign, 206–7

drug wars, 105, 109

dual labor market, 9–12, 38–39, 55

Durbin, Dick, 176

education, public, 92, 163, 166–67, 174

Eisenhower administration, 58–59

Ellis Island, 42

El Norte (film), 112

El Salvador. See Salvadoran immigrants

employers: exploitation of immigrant workers, 54–55, 57, 62, 74–75, 116, 121–22, 191; reliance on Farm Labor Contractors, 123–24; sanctions for hiring undocumented workers, 12–13, 62, 115–16, 132, 189–91

enforcement of immigration laws: abandoning enforcement policies, 204–5; as component of comprehensive reform, 188, 189–90, 195–96, 200, 202; effects on agriculture and industry, 125–26; during Great Depression, 53; in interior of US, 100, 105, 107; under Obama administration, 117; workplace raids, 116–17, 135–40, 150. See also border enforcement policies

England, ideas about religion/race in, 31

entry without inspection, 43, 45, 53–54, 71–73, 203–4

Equal Protection Clause, 163

European countries, 24–29, 31, 72

European immigrants, 10, 33–35, 44, 45–46

E-Verify program, 93, 117, 140–41, 202–3

excludable classes of immigrants and citizens, 16–17, 31, 33–37, 42, 45

exploitation of immigrant workers, 54–55, 57, 62, 116, 121–22, 191. See also kidnapping of migrants

families: children’s loss of deported parents, 158–62; deportation effects upon, 5–6; family preferences in immigration law, 12, 165, 185; mixed immigration status in, 21, 91; undocumented parents as guilty of bringing children to US, 175–76; youth advocacy for, 177. See also children

Farm Labor Contractors (FLCs), 123–24

Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC), 75–76

farmworkers. See agriculture; migrant workers and US agricultural system

farmworkers movement, 12–13, 60, 124–25, 188

felony immigration violations. See civil vs. criminal immigration violations

financial aid (higher education), 167–68

Flores v. Meese (1997), 154–55

focus groups on immigration, 198–203

foreign-born population (US), 48–49

Fourteenth Amendment (US Constitution), 10, 35, 163

Foxen, Patricia, 67–69

Framingham, Massachusetts, 98

France, Anatole, 24

fraudulent documents, 61–62, 63–64, 69–70, 74–76, 93–94, 95–96, 164–65

“free citizenship” concept, 34

freedom to travel, 26–29, 33–34, 36–37, 40–41, 206

Gabaccia, Donna, 46–47

Gadsden Purchase (1853), 49, 182

GEO Group, 109

Georges, Eugenia, 78

Georgia, 97, 112, 126–27

“global apartheid,” 36–37, 41

globalization, 2, 186

González, Gilbert, 55

Gonzalez, Roberto, 165

Grapes of Wrath (Steinbeck), 124

Great Depression, 53, 55, 59, 124

green cards. See legal permanent residents

Guatemala-Mexico border, 79

Guatemalan immigrants: case histories, 160–61; exclusion from Temporary Protected Status, 89; labor recruitment in, 76, 123–24; migration traditions, 64–67; misunderstanding of their own immigration status, 67–70; in Postville raid, 137; statistics, 48

guest workers: agricultural demand for, 127; Bracero Program, 11, 55–59, 63, 121–22, 135; H-2 Program, 60, 73

Guthrie, Woody, 113, 128

Haitian immigrants, 90

harboring undocumented immigrants, 114–15

health care, 85, 92, 137, 178

higher education, 41, 167–68, 179, 207

Hing, Julianne, 180

Hispanics. See Latinos

Hondagneu-Sotelo, Pierrette, 144–45

Honduran immigrants, 48

housing bubble, 131

human trafficking, 80, 156

Hurricane Katrina, 132

I-94 forms, 72, 96

identity theft, 93–94, 136, 138

Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA, 1996), 140, 167

illegality: under 1891 Immigration Act, 42; under 1924 Immigration Act, 45; under 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act, 60; anti-“illegal” rhetoric, 17–18, 46–47, 192–94, 206–8; challenges to the concept of, 22, 169, 174, 206–7; and inequality, 14; as a legal/social construction, 1–2, 20, 23–24, 208; as means of exploiting workers, 19, 39, 177; prison industry as benefitting from, 101; as scapegoat for social problems, 102, 125; “transition to illegality,” 165–66. See also undocumented immigrants

immigrant rights: and comprehensive immigration reform, 196, 201–3; framing as racial discrimination, 115–16; as human rights, 22; organizations supporting, 190, 202; protests for, 171, 196–98; undocumented youth advocacy for, 41, 168–73, 177

immigrants. See immigration status; migrant workers; undocumented immigrants

immigrants, defined, 43

immigrants vs. workers distinction, 10

Immigrant Workers Freedom Ride, 197–98

Immigration Act (1891), 42

Immigration Act (1903), 42

Immigration Act (1924), 10, 34–35, 44, 45, 54

Immigration Act (IMMACT; 1990), 89

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE): budget growth, 102; deportation cases and DACA, 178; deportation guidelines, 159–61; detention of children and youth, 155–57; fraudulent marriages, 94–95; inspection of immigrants, 71; interior enforcement of immigration law, 100–101; prosecutorial discretion of, 159, 173, 203–4; quotas for removals, 106–7; Secure Communities program, 97–98, 107, 202–3; workplace raids and audits, 116–17. See also earlier Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS)

Immigration and Nationality Act (1965), 59–60, 184–85

Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS): application backlogs, 89; detention of children and youth, 154–55; Operation Vanguard, 134; refugee and asylum policies, 189; workplace raids, 134–40. See also later Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)

immigration court system, 6–8, 99, 102–3, 107, 138–39, 161–62

immigration “crisis,” 194

immigration documents. See fraudulent documents; specific types of documents (e.g., visas)

immigration law and policy: Arizona S.B. 1070, 110–12; children and youth, 156; comprehensive immigration legislation, 196; as criminalizing people of color and African Americans, 15–18, 109; criminal vs. civil violations, 98–100; elimination of “illegality” from, 22, 204–5; exceptions for Mexican workers, 10–11; family preferences, 12, 165, 185; illegality in post-1965 laws, 1–2; on immigration from the Philippines, 164–65; inequality as enshrined in, 24–25, 85–86; as legitimizing abuses against migrants, 82; as prohibiting regularization of immigration status, 41; race and, 33, 107. See also enforcement of immigration laws; specific laws

immigration raids. See workplace raids

Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA; 1986): employer sanctions in, 13; failures of, 189–92; legalization provisions, 61–62, 88; path to citizenship in, 43; prohibition on hiring undocumented workers, 114; provisions for agricultural labor, 122–23

immigration reform proposals (present day), 21–22, 195–96, 204–5. See also comprehensive immigration reform

immigration status: and access to social services, 91–93; as an internal border within US, 176–77; of children and youth, 153, 174–79; methods of attaining legal permanent residence, 46; and registry for noncitizens, 43; temporary statuses, 88–89; undocumented immigrants’ confusion about, 68–69; US laws prohibiting regularization of, 41. See also legalization of immigration status; legal permanent residents; undocumented immigrants

incarceration, 15–18, 104–5. See also detention for immigration violations; prison system

independent contractors, 131–32, 147–48

indigenous people, 7, 30, 48, 63, 64–70, 123, 188

Individual Taxpayer ID Numbers (ITINs), 91

inequality: global, 2, 36–37; “illegal” immigration as perpetuating, 14, 19, 151, 206; as root of immigration to US, 187; as structural to agricultural system, 120–21; in United States, 145

in-sourcing of jobs, 13–14, 118–19, 152

“intending citizenship” concept, 33–34

“internal border,” 176–77

Internal Revenue Service (IRS), 94

Ireland, 31

Irwin (GA) Detention Center, 112

Jalisco, Mexico, 52–54, 56, 62–63

Jews in Spain, 29–30

Jim Crow system, 2, 14–18, 27, 38. See also slavery

jobs: types of jobs undesirable to Americans, 121, 124–25, 127, 143; of undocumented workers, 117–20

Kansas, 126

Kanstroom, Daniel, 57, 58

Kerik, Bernard, 144

kidnapping of migrants, 79–82

labor markets: dual labor market, 9–12, 38–39, 55; effects of reducing undocumented immigration upon, 125; impact of INS/ICE raids upon, 134–36, 140; labor shortages, 55, 126–27, 143

labor recruitment and contracting: for authorized workers, 136, 139; Bracero Program, 11, 55–59, 63, 121–22, 135; forced recruitment of Guatemalan Mayans, 64–66, 68; in H-2 program, 74–76; under IRCA, 123–24; in Mexico, 52–53

labor unions: AFL-CIO, 13, 15, 191, 197–98; Farm Labor Organizing Committee, 75–76; in-sourcing and avoidance of, 133–34; stance on immigration policies, 12–13, 197–98; United Farm Workers, 12–13, 124–25, 188

LaBotz, Dan, 76

La Mesilla Purchase (1853), 49, 182

landscaping industry, 141–45

Latin America, US policies in, 186–87

Latinos: and criminalization of immigration violations, 105; increase in population of, 47–48; mass incarceration of, 15–18; as Secure Communities detainees, 107; undocumented as percentage of, 153; views of employer sanctions, 15–16; as voting bloc, 153, 174, 198, 202. See also Central American immigrants; Mexican immigrants and immigration

“Latino threat narrative,” 101–2

law enforcement. See local law enforcement

“lawfully present” immigrants, 91, 179

Leadership Council on Civil Rights, 115–16

legalization of immigration status: DACA, 90; economic impact of, 149–50; Immigration and Nationality Act (1965), 59–60; industry calls for, 143; IRCA, 61–62, 88, 122–23, 189–92; NACARA, 89; and upward mobility, 127; via reentry through Canada, 46; vs. citizenship, 173. See also fraudulent documents; specific immigration statuses

legal permanent residents: deportation of, 18, 60, 105, 185; entry through Canada, 46; exclusion from services, 91; fraudulent green cards, 164; origin of status, 59

literacy requirements, 43, 53

local law enforcement, 84, 97–98, 110, 195

Los Angeles, California, 144–46

Lovell, George, 65, 68

LULAC (League of United Latin American Citizens), 188, 195

Lutz, Christopher, 65, 68

Management and Training Corporation (MTC), 109

Manifest Destiny, 27

marches for immigrant rights, 171, 196–98

Margolis, Maxine, 78

marrying for documents, 94–95

Martin, Philip, 62, 123, 127

Martínez, Alma, 188–89

Martínez, Oscar, 60

Martínez, Samuel, 78

Massachusetts, 179

massacres of migrants, 81

Massey, Douglas, 48, 61

Mayan immigrants. See Guatemalan immigrants

McCarran-Walter Act (1952), 114

meatpacking industry, 118–19, 133–40, 152

Menchu, Rigoberta, 65–66

Menendez, Robert, 176

Meng, Grace, 175

Menjívar, Cecilia, 89–90, 153

Mexican American rights organizations, 188–89

Mexican immigrants and immigration: Bracero Program, 55–59; criminalization of, 15–18, 82; defined as non-white, 34–35; discrimination against, 36; pre-1919 ease of entry, 43; employer sanctions and, 191–92; exemptions from immigration laws, 9–10, 53; importance in American labor market, 113–14, 125; increase in number of, 47–48, 184–85; “Mexican wages,” 54–55, 57, 183; migration patterns, 42, 48–52, 56, 62–63, 123–24, 184; railroads and, 50–52; restrictions on citizenship of, 34; sending communities in Mexico, 52–54; tourist visas, 71–72; US economic crisis and decrease in, 77; and visa quota system, 44, 184; voluntary removal of, 99; as “workers” vs. “immigrants,” 11–12, 50, 183

Mexican Migration Project, 49

Mexican National Institute of Migration (INAMI), 79, 82

Mexico: children deported to, 154–56; company towns in, 54–55; dangers of migration through, 77–82; indigenous people, 7, 48, 63, 123, 188; limits on migration from, 60–61; northern border, 82–83; railroads and migration in, 50–52; southern border control, 78–79

Michigan, 179

middle-class American lifestyle, 144–45, 146, 148–51

Migrant Farmworker Justice Project, 118

migrants to US, risks faced by, 3–6, 8, 79–82, 158

migrant workers: culture of migration, 56; ineligibility for DACA, 175; as returning to home country, 49–50; seasonal patterns of migration, 11–12, 42, 118, 120–22, 184–85. See also undocumented immigrants

migration patterns: European/American domination over, 26–29, 33; of Guatemalan Mayans, 64–67; IRCA disruption of Mexican, 62–63, 123–24; from Philippines, 164–65; poverty and crossing through Mexico, 78; and railroads in Mexico, 50–53; as seasonal and circular, 11–12, 56, 60–61, 184–85; of undocumented immigrants, 20. See also labor recruitment and contracting

military service, 168, 174

minimum wage, 125, 132

Mitchell, Don, 120, 121–22

mobility restrictions, 24–30

Molina, Sandra, 160

Morton, John, 159, 173, 203

Motomura, Hiroshi, 33–34

Muslims in Spain, 29–30

NAACP, 13, 115–16

nannies, 144–47

national security, 95, 101–2, 158, 203

Native Americans, 27–28, 30, 31, 34, 181

Navarrette, Ruben, 207

Nebraska, 134–35

neoliberal policies, 186–87

Nevada, 131

Nevins, Joseph, 194

New Imperialism, 27

New Orleans, 132

newspaper delivery system, 146–48

Ngai, Mae, 45

Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central America Relief Act (NACARA; 1997), 89

9500 Liberty (film), 150

No More Deaths (organization), 3

North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), 63

Obama, Barack: on comprehensive immigration reform, 200–204; DACA program, 90, 153, 174–79; on DREAM Act, 172–74; E-Verify system expansion, 140, 202–3; removal and deportation under, 100, 107, 158–61, 177; on undocumented children, 162; on workplace raids, 117

Operation Hold the Line, 82–83

Operation Streamline, 6–8, 104–6

Operation Wetback, 58

Orantes-Hernandez v. Meese, 189

organized crime, 80–81, 204–5

out-migration, 42

outsourcing, 13, 130, 142

Pacheco, Gaby, 170–71, 172

Palauan immigrants, 139

parental rights, 153–54, 159–62

parents. See families

Passel, Jeffrey, 191

passports, 40–41, 43, 44, 73, 95, 159, 165

paths to citizenship, 43, 168, 174, 177, 200–201, 205

Patrick, Deval, 98

payroll fraud, 131

Pearce, Russell, 110–11

Perez-Funes v. District Director, 189

Perry, Rick, 167, 194–95

Philippines, 163–65

Plan Sur, 78

plea bargains, 105, 138

Plyer v. Doe (1982), 163

political consulting firms, 198–203

politicians: attracting Latino votes, 173–74; campaign donations to, 111; as employers of undocumented workers, 144; immigration as rallying point for, 101–2, 192–93, 199–203; lobbying by prison system, 108–11

Postville (IA) raid, 69, 136–40

Praeli, Lorella, 177

Pratt, Travis, 108

Pren, Karen, 48

prices of consumer goods, 51, 101, 125

prison system, 15–18, 38, 104, 108–12, 158

probationers as agricultural labor, 127

Proposition 187 (CA), 192–93

prosecutorial discretion, 103, 159, 173, 203–4

protests for immigrant rights, 171, 196–98

Proyecto Kino, 4–5

public benefits eligibility, 91–93, 163, 167, 178–79

public defenders, 103, 105, 106, 138–39

public housing, 92

Puerto Rican birth certificates, 93–94

quota system (visas), 12, 33, 44, 46, 60, 184

race and racism: in anti-immigrant movement, 198–99, 206–7; and citizenship, 32–37; in criminalization of immigration violations, 105; employer sanctions and racial profiling, 115–16; in ideologies justifying colonialism, 26–29; and immigration laws, 2, 10, 15–18; linkage to religion, 29–32; against Mexicans, 182–83; racial profiling in workplace raids, 135–36; and welfare reform, 193

raids, 116–17, 134–40, 150

railroads and migration patterns, 50–52, 79–80

REAL ID Act (2005), 95–96

reentry after removal, 45–46, 104, 106–7, 160, 203

refugees, 136, 155–56, 189

registry for noncitizens, 43, 45

Reid, Harry, 172, 173, 176

religion, 26, 29–32

remittances, 56, 67

removal from the US: under Operation Streamline, 104–5; reentry after removal, 45–46, 104, 106–7, 160, 203; voluntary departure and removal, 99–100, 104. See also deportation

Republican Party, 97, 172–73, 188, 193–95, 198

Reyes, Silvestre, 83

rights: as conferred through citizenship, 32–34, 36, 115–16; of deported parents, 161–62; under immigration court system, 102–3, 138; protests for immigrant rights, 171, 196–98; race and, 30; of undocumented children, 153; voting rights, 16, 34, 35; work as obligation vs. privilege, 37–39. See also immigrant rights

Rodino, Peter, 115

Rogers, Chip, 97

Romney, Mitt, 144, 178, 198

Rubashkin family, 136–37

Rubio, Marco, 173–74

Ruskola, Teemu, 28

Russian immigrants, 44–45

Salvadoran immigrants, 48, 89–90, 143, 189

sanctions against employers, 12–13, 62, 115–16, 132, 189–91

sanctuary cities, 195

sanctuary movement, 189

S.B. 1070 (Arizona), 110–12

Secure Communities program, 97–98, 107, 202–3

Security Act (1950), 59

segregation of Mexican workers, 54–55, 183

Sen, Rinku, 198–99, 206

September 11, 2001, attacks, 95, 193, 199

service-sector jobs, 119–20

Sheridan, Lynnaire, 73–74

slavery, 9, 30, 31, 32, 183. See also Jim Crow system

small business, 140, 141, 142–43, 150

Snodgrass, Michael, 56

Social Security, 69, 93–94, 101, 136, 138–39, 163, 178

social service eligibility, 91–93, 163, 167, 178–79

Somers, Aryah, 140

South American immigrants, 77

Spain, 29–31, 64

Spanish-language media, 197

Sparks, Sam, 104

Special Agricultural Worker (SAW) status, 61, 64, 123, 190

Stansbury, Jeff, 191

states, immigration policies of, 42, 95–96, 141, 167–68, 179

Steinbeck, John, 124

Stevens, Jacqueline, 36, 187

Student Immigration Movement, 41. See also DREAM Act; undocumented youth

Students for Immigrant Rights, 171

student visas, 72

Suárez-Orozco, Carola, 166–67

Suárez-Orozco, Marcelo, 166–67

subsistence agriculture, 186–87

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), 92

Suro, Robert, 62

Swift plant raids, 117, 135

“Take Our Jobs” campaign, 124–25

Tamayo, Bill, 191

taxes paid by undocumented immigrants, 91, 94

Taylor, Paul S., 52

Tea Party Movement, 198

temporary immigration statuses, 72–73, 74, 89–90, 96, 153, 196

Temporary Protected Status, 89–90, 96, 153

Texas, 82–83, 96–97, 131–33, 194

Todorova, Irina, 166–67

Torpey, John, 33

tourist visas, 71–72

traffic violations, 97, 107, 204

“transition to illegality,” 165–66

Truman administration, 120–21

tuition, in-state, 41, 167–68, 179, 194

287(g) program, 97–98

undocumented immigrants: anxiety felt by, 68, 90; confusion about immigration law, 68–69, 103, 112, 138–39; criminalization of, 15–18, 82, 98–100, 169; debts to labor recruiters, 75–76; documenting an undocumented life, 178; as exploitable labor, 39, 116, 131–32, 148–49; fiscal impact of, 92–93; inability to return to home countries, 89, 185, 195, 205; length of stay in US, 88; means of becoming “illegal,” 20–21; post-1965 increase of, 47–48, 184–85; upward mobility of, 126, 127; “wetbacks,” 47, 57–58. See also deportation; fraudulent documents; illegality

undocumented youth: advocacy of, 41, 168–73, 177; challenge to anti-immigrant culture, 206–7; under DACA, 174–79; in-state tuition advocacy, 167–68. See also children

unions. See labor unions

United Farm Workers, 12–13, 124–25, 188

United We Dream, 170–71, 172, 177

unlawful presence, 99–100, 107

upward mobility, 9, 127, 145

urban-to-rural shifts in industry, 118–19, 130, 134, 135

USA-PATRIOT Act (2001), 185, 193

US Citizen and Immigration Services (USCIS), 175

US economy: African Americans as excluded from, 16; effects of undocumented workers on, 149–50; inequality in, 14, 38–39, 55, 145, 208; reliance on undocumented workers, 11, 19–20, 119–20, 125–26, 135

US-Mexico border: deaths at, 3, 79, 83–85; deportation testimonies taken at, 3–6; fluidity of, 19–20, 49–50, 56; violence at, 204–5. See also border enforcement policies

“US nationals” immigration category, 164

Utah “driver privilege cards,” 96

Vargas, Jose Antonio, 87–88, 163–65, 170, 171–72, 174

Villaraigosa, Antonio, 97

visas: and Americans’ freedom to travel, 40–41; fraudulent documents, 74; overstaying of, 71–73. See also fraudulent documents; quota system

Visa Waiver Program, 72

voluntary departure and removal, 99–100, 104. See also deportation

voting rights, 16, 34, 35

Wacquant, Loïc, 38

wages: agricultural system need for low wages, 121–22, 125–26; effects of undocumented immigrants upon, 149–50; of independent contractors, 147; “Mexican wages,” 54–55, 57, 183; minimum wage, 125, 132

Walker, Richard, 122

welfare reform, 167–193

Westen Strategies (consulting firm), 199, 207

Western Hemisphere immigration limits, 35–36, 44, 46, 122

“wetbacks,” 47, 57–58

Wilkinson, Daniel, 66

Williams, Rob, 118

William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection and Reauthorization Act (2008), 156

Wilson, Pete, 192, 193

Wilson, Woodrow, 28

Women, Infants and Children (WIC) program, 92

Woodrow, Karen, 191

Wooten, Larry, 13

work authorization: under DACA, 174; H-2 visas, 60, 73–75; and pending asylum cases, 96; recruitment of workers with, 136, 139; vs. legal entry to US, 72; under waiver of employer sanctions, 132. See also legal permanent residents

working conditions: in agriculture, 121, 125, 128; construction industry, 119, 131–32; immigrants’ inability to protest, 116, 119, 191; meatpacking industry, 118–19, 134, 136, 137; nannies, newspaper delivery and landscaping, 142, 146, 147–48

workplace raids, 116–17, 134–40, 150

work records, 178

youth activism. See undocumented youth

Zetas cartel, 81–82

Zolberg, Aristide, 54, 56