2019
DOI: 10.1111/lasr.12414
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Relational Legal Consciousness of U.S. Citizenship: Privilege, Responsibility, Guilt, and Love in Latino Mixed-Status Families

Abstract: Based on interviews with 100 members of mixed‐status families in Los Angeles, California, this article analyzes how U.S. citizen children practice and understand citizenship in the context of punitive laws targeting their loved ones. Participants' narratives of citizenship as privilege, responsibility, and guilt reveal that despite normative conceptions of citizenship as a universally equal status, citizenship intersects with key social markers to determine the contours and inequalities of substantive citizens… Show more

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Cited by 83 publications
(88 citation statements)
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References 71 publications
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“…Uncertainty since the 2016 presidential election with respect to deportation policy and practice, including rare but nascent efforts at denaturalization, may have reversed this optimism (57-59). Among U.S.-born citizens, who are about half as likely as naturalized citizens to live in households with Latino noncitizens, a growing national salience of deportation policy and practice under a vocally-hostile presidential administration may matter (16). Their privileged birthright citizenship may have buffered against deportation fears prior to the 2016 presidential election, but virulent rhetoric targeting Latinos-regardless of citizenship or legal status-may underlie their heightened fears (13).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Uncertainty since the 2016 presidential election with respect to deportation policy and practice, including rare but nascent efforts at denaturalization, may have reversed this optimism (57-59). Among U.S.-born citizens, who are about half as likely as naturalized citizens to live in households with Latino noncitizens, a growing national salience of deportation policy and practice under a vocally-hostile presidential administration may matter (16). Their privileged birthright citizenship may have buffered against deportation fears prior to the 2016 presidential election, but virulent rhetoric targeting Latinos-regardless of citizenship or legal status-may underlie their heightened fears (13).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…26.6 million Latino U.S. citizen adults live with 4.8 million noncitizens; 17.3 million Latino U.S. citizen children live with 7.7 million noncitizens. † Ethnographies of these mixed-citizenship families reveal that U.S. citizens internalize fears their family members may be deported (16,17). Even in households where all Latino members are U.S. citizens, worries of being misrecognized as deportable in an U.S. immigration regime racialized in its enforcement may contribute to deportation fears (13,18,19).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Second, it calls for attempts to track the institutional production of legal detractors. Of what social locale – considering issues of gender, race, class, immigrant status, relational ties (Chua and Engel, 2019; Abrego, 2019) and others – do those come from? What is their experience with government institutions?…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When looking at the racial categorization of undocumented Latinx immigrants specifically, it is also important to look at how the concept of race is closely connected to modern conceptions of nation and citizenship, especially racialized citizenship (Abrego 2019; Carrillo and Rodriguez 2016). Relatedly, Weitz (2003) argues, “While racial distinctions have most often been based on phenotype, race is not essentially about skin color but about the assignment of indelible traits to particular groups.…”
Section: Conceptualizing the Racialization Of Latinx Undocumented Immmentioning
confidence: 99%