This study explores how Latina women fleeing gender-related violence seek protection for themselves and their children under Canada\u27s humanitarian laws. Rising emphasis on border control contributes to a growing number of forced migrants whose transnational movement is constructed as “illegal.” Migrants who fall outside legal migration channels are exposed to precarious conditions that can lead to further violence. Through interpretive analysis of in-depth interviews with women from Mexico and Central America, we explore how immigration policies produce gendered forms of “illegality.” We also highlight how women\u27s migration in search for rights and protection represents a form of substantive citizenship
Since 2011, the United States has seen a dramatic increase in the arrival of Central American immigr...
In an increasingly globalized world, border control is continuously changing. Nation-states grapple ...
The United States deported 24,870 women in 2013, mostly to Latin America. We examine life history in...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in the Journal of Immigra...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in the Journal of Immigra...
This paper is based on research conducted by the Migrant Mothers Project, led by Rupaleem Bhuyan as ...
This article presents a mixed-methods study of domestic-violence-related claims for Mexican asylum-s...
From publisher: This article presents a mixed-methods study of domestic-violence-related claims for ...
Mexico is a transit country for hundreds of thousands of migrants traveling north. Due to economic l...
The article documents and analyses the topic of violence in Central American migration, with a speci...
The article documents and analyses the topic of violence in Central American migration, with a speci...
This article examines Central American women migrants’ decision-making and protective strategies whi...
Since 2011, the United States has seen a dramatic increase in the arrival of Central American immigr...
In an increasingly globalized world, border control is continuously changing. Nation-states grapple ...
The Migrant Mothers Project (MMP) was launched in 2011, as a collaborative research project led by R...
Since 2011, the United States has seen a dramatic increase in the arrival of Central American immigr...
In an increasingly globalized world, border control is continuously changing. Nation-states grapple ...
The United States deported 24,870 women in 2013, mostly to Latin America. We examine life history in...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in the Journal of Immigra...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in the Journal of Immigra...
This paper is based on research conducted by the Migrant Mothers Project, led by Rupaleem Bhuyan as ...
This article presents a mixed-methods study of domestic-violence-related claims for Mexican asylum-s...
From publisher: This article presents a mixed-methods study of domestic-violence-related claims for ...
Mexico is a transit country for hundreds of thousands of migrants traveling north. Due to economic l...
The article documents and analyses the topic of violence in Central American migration, with a speci...
The article documents and analyses the topic of violence in Central American migration, with a speci...
This article examines Central American women migrants’ decision-making and protective strategies whi...
Since 2011, the United States has seen a dramatic increase in the arrival of Central American immigr...
In an increasingly globalized world, border control is continuously changing. Nation-states grapple ...
The Migrant Mothers Project (MMP) was launched in 2011, as a collaborative research project led by R...
Since 2011, the United States has seen a dramatic increase in the arrival of Central American immigr...
In an increasingly globalized world, border control is continuously changing. Nation-states grapple ...
The United States deported 24,870 women in 2013, mostly to Latin America. We examine life history in...