This Article advances a new approach to understanding the relationship between work and citizenship that comes out of research on African American and Latino immigrant low-wage workers. Media accounts typically portray African Americans and Latino immigrants as engaged in a pitched battle for jobs. Conventional wisdom suggests that the source of tension between these groups is labor competition or the racial prejudice of employers. While these explanations offer useful insights, they do not fully explain the intensity and longevity of the conflict. Nor has relevant legal scholarship offered a sufficient theoretical lens through which this conflict can be viewed. In the absence of such a theory, opportunities for solidarity building are lost...
Relied upon but unwelcome, among us but uninvited, undocumented workers in the United States – now n...
In its previous research, Work Package 10 of bEUcitizen examined the rise of the worker-citizen and ...
Migrant workers claims for greater protection in a globalized world are typically expressed either i...
This Article advances a new approach to understanding the relationship between work and citizenship ...
The realities of low-wage work in the United States challenge our basic notions of freedom and equal...
The rapidly growing Latino immigrant population raises questions about how the “brown collar” worker...
Over one million new immigrants arrive in the United States each year. This spring, Americans saw se...
Domestic workers are the workers that make all other work possible. They are nannies, housekeepers, ...
This Article integrates social science theory about immigrant incorporation and administrative agenc...
This paper examines the relationship between precarious employment, legal status, and racialization....
This article explores the impact of globalization on immigrant workers in the United States. Althoug...
The narrative of low-wage worker exploitation has increasingly narrowed in focus to reflect the expe...
Unauthorized workers face precarity in the workplace and the threat of forced expulsion from their c...
This Article addresses the problems faced by immigrant workers on Long Island. Part I briefly examin...
Undocumented people are often described as living and working “in the shadows.” This framing identif...
Relied upon but unwelcome, among us but uninvited, undocumented workers in the United States – now n...
In its previous research, Work Package 10 of bEUcitizen examined the rise of the worker-citizen and ...
Migrant workers claims for greater protection in a globalized world are typically expressed either i...
This Article advances a new approach to understanding the relationship between work and citizenship ...
The realities of low-wage work in the United States challenge our basic notions of freedom and equal...
The rapidly growing Latino immigrant population raises questions about how the “brown collar” worker...
Over one million new immigrants arrive in the United States each year. This spring, Americans saw se...
Domestic workers are the workers that make all other work possible. They are nannies, housekeepers, ...
This Article integrates social science theory about immigrant incorporation and administrative agenc...
This paper examines the relationship between precarious employment, legal status, and racialization....
This article explores the impact of globalization on immigrant workers in the United States. Althoug...
The narrative of low-wage worker exploitation has increasingly narrowed in focus to reflect the expe...
Unauthorized workers face precarity in the workplace and the threat of forced expulsion from their c...
This Article addresses the problems faced by immigrant workers on Long Island. Part I briefly examin...
Undocumented people are often described as living and working “in the shadows.” This framing identif...
Relied upon but unwelcome, among us but uninvited, undocumented workers in the United States – now n...
In its previous research, Work Package 10 of bEUcitizen examined the rise of the worker-citizen and ...
Migrant workers claims for greater protection in a globalized world are typically expressed either i...