2019
DOI: 10.1080/1369183x.2019.1582325
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Humanitarian capital: how lawyers help immigrants use suffering to claim membership in the nation-state

Abstract: This paper explores how humanitarianism operates within the nation-state, asking: what strategies do lawyers employ to help undocumented immigrants access membership rights in the United States though humanitarian policies? I identify three concurrent evaluations that lawyers undertake to determine legalization strategies. First, attorneys carry out an assessment of threat of deportation because not all undocumented immigrants are equally at risk. Second, they determine eligibility by matching migrants' comple… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(26 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
(13 reference statements)
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“…Compared to undocumented immigrant adults (Galli 2019) and unaccompanied teenagers (Canizales 2015) who are not apprehended and remain outside of state systems, youths categorized as UACs interact intensively with multiple state institutions since they begin their incorporation in the US (i.e. adapting to and gaining membership in the receiving state) (Brown 2011), and, in the process, their dichotomous "legal consciousness" (Merry 1990) is formed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Compared to undocumented immigrant adults (Galli 2019) and unaccompanied teenagers (Canizales 2015) who are not apprehended and remain outside of state systems, youths categorized as UACs interact intensively with multiple state institutions since they begin their incorporation in the US (i.e. adapting to and gaining membership in the receiving state) (Brown 2011), and, in the process, their dichotomous "legal consciousness" (Merry 1990) is formed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We then coded interviews for the five forms of violence, their impacts on families, and women's decisions to migrate. Although we informed respondents that we had no government affiliation and were not lawyers or caseworkers, their interaction with legal counsel and/or staff at the shelters may have encouraged them to emphasize their roles as victims (see Galli, 2019). Nevertheless, we got to know women over multiple visits and most of them carried photos or documentation of the violence they described, increasing our trust in their stories.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scholars of gender and forced migration show that all of these push factors are gendered (Freedman, 2015;Menjívar & Walsh, 2017, 2019. They note that women around the world face a continuum of violence tied to their social, economic, and political roles as women, especially in the contexts of organized crime or war (Giles & Hyndman, 2004;Merry, 2009).…”
Section: Violence Migration and Motherhoodmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…There can even be disagreement within countries over what to label the same people, as Whitaker (2020) shows in the cases of Kenya, Tanzania, and South Africa. Galli (2019) finds that lawyers often encourage undocumented immigrants in the United States to apply for asylum in order to gain permanent legal status. Mourad and Norman (2020) highlight the reverse status movement, from refugee to migrant, in their analysis of how institutional drift and policy layering intentionally blur migrant and refugee categories (Betts, 2010; Streeck & Thelen, 2005).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%