Literature DB >> 21777124

No soy welferero: undocumented Latino laborers in the crosshairs of legitimation maneuvers.

James Quesada1.   

Abstract

California urban and agricultural centers rely heavily on Latino migrant laborers, regardless of their legal documented status. In the delivery of social services, and in the mass media, popular consciousness, and formal legal understandings and arrangements, Latino laborers are viewed as either legitimate voluntary low-wage workers or illegitimate undocumented workers not entitled to the same civil rights as US citizens. Their de facto second-class status becomes a central component of their social identity, with the structural conditions of their lives internalized, resulting in limited agency and poor social and health outcomes. The lived experience of structural vulnerability prefigures the actions and efforts of undocumented Latino contingent workers. In this article, the capacity for Latino laborers to maneuver and negotiate the travails of everyday life is explored.
Copyright © 2011 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21777124     DOI: 10.1080/01459740.2011.576904

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol        ISSN: 0145-9740


  7 in total

1.  Syndemic factors associated with drinking patterns among Latino men and Latina transgender women who have sex with men in New York City.

Authors:  Omar Martinez; Elwin Wu; Ethan C Levine; Miguel Muñoz-Laboy; Joseph Spadafino; Brian Dodge; Scott D Rhodes; Javier López Rios; Hugo Ovejero; Eva M Moya; Silvia Chavez Baray; Alex Carballo-Diéguez; M Isabel Fernandez
Journal:  Addict Res Theory       Date:  2016-04-10

2.  Sexual health of Latino migrant day labourers under conditions of structural vulnerability.

Authors:  Kurt C Organista; Paula A Worby; James Quesada; Sonya G Arreola; Alex H Kral; Sahar Khoury
Journal:  Cult Health Sex       Date:  2012-11-09

3.  "As Good As It Gets": Undocumented Latino Day Laborers Negotiating Discrimination in San Francisco and Berkeley, California, USA.

Authors:  James Quesada; Sonya Arreola; Alex Kral; Sahar Khoury; Kurt C Organista; Paula Worby
Journal:  City Soc (Wash)       Date:  2014-04-01

4.  The impact of China-to-US immigration on structural and cultural determinants of HIV-related stigma: implications for HIV care of Chinese immigrants.

Authors:  Timothy D Becker; Ohemaa B Poku; Xinlin Chen; Jeffrey Wong; Amar Mandavia; Minda Huang; Yuqi Chen; Debbie Huang; Hong Ngo; Lawrence H Yang
Journal:  Ethn Health       Date:  2020-07-15       Impact factor: 2.772

5.  Syndemics in Symbiotic Cities: Pathogenic Policy and the Production of Health Inequity across Borders.

Authors:  Carina Heckert
Journal:  J Borderl Stud       Date:  2019-12-09

6.  The structural impacts of enforcement policy on Latino immigrant health.

Authors:  Maria-Elena De Trinidad Young; Denise Diaz Payan; Iris Y Guzman-Ruiz
Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2022-09-16

7.  La desesperación in Latino migrant day laborers and its role in alcohol and substance-related sexual risk.

Authors:  Kurt C Organista; Sonya G Arreola; Torsten B Neilands
Journal:  SSM Popul Health       Date:  2016-02-15
  7 in total

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