This article analyzes how Central American immigrants in tenuous legal statuses experience current immigration laws. Based on ethnographic observations and over 200 interviews conducted between 1998 and 2009 with immigrants in Los Angeles and Phoenix and individuals in sending communities, this study reveals how the convergence and implementation of immigration and criminal law constitute forms of violence. Drawing on theories of structural and symbolic violence, the authors use the analytic category “legal violence” to capture the normalized but cumulatively injurious effects of the law. The analysis focuses on three central and interrelated areas of immigrants’ lives—work, family, and schooling—to expose how the criminalization of immigra...
The issue brief will focus on the "Latino Paradox" of violence within American culture. Furthermore,...
This article examines the enduring alterations in behaviors, practices, and self-image that immigran...
Cities across the U.S. increasingly respond to undocumented immigrants through local law. These loca...
This article analyzes how Central American immigrants in tenuous legal statuses experience current i...
Abstract: Central America is one of the most violent regions in the world, and violence continues to...
Rampant gang-related violence in the Northern Triangle of Central America is increasingly pushing bo...
Historically, periods of accelerating immigration have been accompanied by nativist alarms, percepti...
This article examines the effects of an uncertain legal status on the lives of immigrants, situating...
El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala count among today’s most violent countries of the world. Qualit...
The mounting problems of abuse and neglect faced by illegal aliens crossing the border between the U...
This article shows the relationships laden with violence within the dynamics of cross-border mobilit...
The United States has deported more than four million noncitizens in the last twenty years largely b...
The dramatic increase in both lawful and unauthorized immigration in recent decades produced a groun...
Honorable Mention at the Denman Undergraduate Research ForumMany of the 20,777 Salvadorans who are d...
The aim of this review is to explore the consequences of the incorporation of criminal law into immi...
The issue brief will focus on the "Latino Paradox" of violence within American culture. Furthermore,...
This article examines the enduring alterations in behaviors, practices, and self-image that immigran...
Cities across the U.S. increasingly respond to undocumented immigrants through local law. These loca...
This article analyzes how Central American immigrants in tenuous legal statuses experience current i...
Abstract: Central America is one of the most violent regions in the world, and violence continues to...
Rampant gang-related violence in the Northern Triangle of Central America is increasingly pushing bo...
Historically, periods of accelerating immigration have been accompanied by nativist alarms, percepti...
This article examines the effects of an uncertain legal status on the lives of immigrants, situating...
El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala count among today’s most violent countries of the world. Qualit...
The mounting problems of abuse and neglect faced by illegal aliens crossing the border between the U...
This article shows the relationships laden with violence within the dynamics of cross-border mobilit...
The United States has deported more than four million noncitizens in the last twenty years largely b...
The dramatic increase in both lawful and unauthorized immigration in recent decades produced a groun...
Honorable Mention at the Denman Undergraduate Research ForumMany of the 20,777 Salvadorans who are d...
The aim of this review is to explore the consequences of the incorporation of criminal law into immi...
The issue brief will focus on the "Latino Paradox" of violence within American culture. Furthermore,...
This article examines the enduring alterations in behaviors, practices, and self-image that immigran...
Cities across the U.S. increasingly respond to undocumented immigrants through local law. These loca...