“…Much attention has been paid to the most vulnerable farmworkers, including farmworkers with unauthorized (or perhaps more accurately, “informally authorized” (Plascencia, 2009)) immigration status (Holmes, 2013; Mares, 2019; Sexsmith, 2016) or temporary guestworker status (Griffith, 2006), racial‐ethnic minoritized workers (Holmes, 2013), the lowest‐ranking field workers who face some of the worst working conditions (Duke, 2011; Holmes, 2013), and workers employed by multi‐layered networks of exploitative labor brokers (Balderrama & Molina, 2009; Horton, 2016). This somewhat disproportionate focus on the most structurally vulnerable farmworkers has occurred amidst (and perhaps has been encouraged by) the anthropological turn to the “suffering slot,” through which “the figure of humanity united in its shared vulnerability to suffering” (Robbins, 2013, p. 450) became the primary subject of anthropological inquiry.…”