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University of California Press

About the Book

Enduring Illegality chronicles the lives of undocumented Mexican immigrants who have spent decades in the United States waiting for a path to legalization that never arrives. Based on longitudinal fieldwork, this book traces how people who migrated as young adults have transitioned into middle age still undocumented, caught in a state of legal and temporal suspension. Focusing on parents who would have qualified for the failed Deferred Action for Parents of Americans (DAPA) program, Angela S. García argues that illegality is not only a legal condition but a temporal one, produced and reproduced through decades of waiting for reform. Even in the face of such exclusion, migrants sustain lives, labor, and care across borders. Enduring Illegality offers a critical account of how the state uses time as a mechanism of immigration control, structuring lives and inequality in ways that outlast any single policy or presidential administration.
 

About the Author

Angela S. García is Associate Professor in the Crown Family School of Social Work, Policy, and Practice at the University of Chicago and author of Legal Passing: Navigating Undocumented Life and Local Immigration Law.

Table of Contents

Contents

List of Illustrations

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Waiting Through the Politics of Immigration

1. Deferring Action: The Waiting State as Immigration Governance

2. Growing Older on the Job: Illegality and the Work of Midlife

3. Caring Here and Caring There: The Undocumented Sandwich Generation

4. Dying Undocumented: Aging, Health, and End-of-Life Horizons

5. Relating to the State: The Felt Politics of Immigrant Illegality

Conclusion: Redressing the Waiting State

Notes

Bibliography

Index