Paper trails migrants, documents, and legal insecurity

Introduction. Paper trails : migrants, bureaucratic inscription, and legal recognition / Sarah B. Horton -- The "people out of place" : state limits on free mobility and the making of im(migrants) / Nandita Sharma -- And about time too . . . : migration, documentation, and temporalities /...

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
Weitere Verfasser: Horton, Sarah Bronwen (HerausgeberIn), Heyman, Josiah M. (HerausgeberIn)
Format: UnknownFormat
Sprache:eng
Veröffentlicht: Durham, London Duke University Press 2020
Schriftenreihe:Global insecurities
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction. Paper trails : migrants, bureaucratic inscription, and legal recognition / Sarah B. Horton -- The "people out of place" : state limits on free mobility and the making of im(migrants) / Nandita Sharma -- And about time too . . . : migration, documentation, and temporalities / Bridget Anderson -- Documenting membership : the divergent politics of migrant driver's licenses in New Mexico and Arizona / Doris Marie Provine and Monica W. Varsanyi -- Documented as unauthorized / Deborah A. Boehm -- Opportunities and double binds : legal craft in an era of uncertainty/ Susan Bibler Coutin -- Document overseers, enhanced enforcement, and racialized local contexts : experiences of Latino immigrants in Phoenix, Arizona / Cecilia Menjívar -- Knowing your rights in Trump's America : paper trails of community empowerment / Ruth Gomberg-Muñoz -- Strategies of documentation among Kichwa transnational migrants / Juan Thomas Ordóñez
Beschreibung:Includes bibliographical references and index
Beschreibung:258 Seiten
Produktionsangaben:"PAPER TRAILS is an edited volume that offers a critical analysis of various types of identity documentation, such as U.S. state-issued driver's licenses, to examine the power dynamics between migrants and traditional immigrant-receiving countries. In the United States, Canada, and the European Union, states are providing temporary and provisional legal statuses for migrants while making it increasingly harder for them to earn permanent legal status, a phenomenon known as "Global Apartheid." The effects of those temporary legal statuses on migrants are profound. This collection unites anthropologists, sociologists, geographers, and political scientists to examine the processes through which migrants are inscribed into official bureaucratic systems at various scales of government to show how states exert their power and how migrants navigate new systems of control. The project is divided into three parts, each consisting of three chapters. Part I outlines the basic features of identity documents in traditional immigrant-receiving countries. Nandita Sharma examines the historical construction of the category of "migrant" as opposed to "citizen," and Bridget Anderson considers immigration policies in the United Kingdom specifically. Doris Marie Provine and Monica W. Varsanyi analyze the political struggles around driver's licenses in Arizona and New Mexico. The second part of the book looks at how documents shape migrants' experiences of space and time, focusing on the multiple and unpredictable spaces in which migrants encounter the power of the state. Finally, part III examines how state control is mutable and seemingly never-ending, and it describes the numerous ways in which migrants and their advocates engage creatively with the state. This book will be of interest to scholars and students in migration studies, anthropology, sociology, geography, political science, and security studies"--
ISBN:9781478007944
978-1-4780-0794-4
9781478008453
978-1-4780-0845-3