Anti-immigrant sentiment reached a fever pitch after 9/11, but its origins go back much further. Public rhetoric aimed at exposing a so-called invasion of Latino immigrants has been gaining ground for more than three decadesâand fueling increasingly restrictive federal immigration policy. Accompanied by a flagging U.S. economyârecord-level joblessness, bankruptcy, and income inequalityâas well as waning consumer confidence, these conditions signaled one of the most hostile environments for immigrants in recent memory. In Brokered Boundaries, Douglas Massey and Magaly SĂĄnchez untangle the complex political, social, and economic conditions underlying the rise of xenophobia in U.S. society. The book draws on in-depth interviews with Latin American immigrants in metropolitan New York and Philadelphia andâin their own words and imagesâreveals what life is like for immigrants attempting to integrate in anti-immigrant times. What do the social categories "Latino" and "American" actually mean to today's immigrants? Brokered Boundaries analyzes how first- and second-generation immigrants from Central and South America and the Caribbean navigate these categories and their associated meanings as they make their way through U.S. society. Massey and SĂĄnchez argue that the mythos of immigration, in which newcomers gradually shed their respective languages, beliefs, and cultural practices in favor of a distinctly American way of life, is, in reality, a process of negotiation between new arrivals and native-born citizens. Natives control interactions with outsiders by creating institutional, social, psychological, and spatial mechanisms that delimit immigrants' access to material resources and even social status. Immigrants construct identities based on how they perceive and respond to these social boundaries. The authors make clear that today's Latino immigrants are brokering boundaries in the context of unprecedented economic uncertainty, repressive anti-immigrant legislation, and a heightening fear that upward mobility for immigrants translates into downward mobility for the native-born. Despite an absolute decline in Latino immigration, immigration-related statutes have tripled in recent years, including many that further shred the safety net for legal permanent residents as well as the undocumented. Brokered Boundaries shows that, although Latin American immigrants come from many different countries, their common reception in a hostile social environment produces an emergent Latino identity soon after arrival. During anti-immigrant times, however, the longer immigrants stay in America, the more likely they are to experience discrimination and the less likely they are to identify as Americans.

eBook - ePub
Brokered Boundaries
Immigrant Identity in Anti-Immigrant Times
- 305 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
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Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- About the Authors
- Preface
- Chapter 1. Constructing Immigrant Identity
- Chapter 2. Roots and Motivations
- Chapter 3. The Rise of Anti-Immigrant Times
- Chapter 4. Worlds of Work
- Chapter 5. Dreams and Disappointments
- Chapter 6. Transnational Options
- Chapter 7. Verbalizing Identity
- Chapter 8. Visualizing Identity
- Chapter 9. Identity, Integration, and the Future
- Appendix A. Sampling, Interviewing, Coding, and Data Analysis
- Appendix B. Information Sheet Presented to Potential Respondents
- Appendix C. Interview Guide: First Generation
- Appendix D. Interview Guide: Second Generation
- References
- Index
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Yes, you can access Brokered Boundaries by Douglas S. Massey,Magaly Sanchez R. in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & Public Policy. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.