
What Does It Really Mean To Be Undocumented, Particularly In The Contemporary United States? Political Philosophers, Policymakers And Others Often Define The Term Undocumented Migrant Legalistically-that Is, In Terms Of Lacking Legal Authorization To Live And Work In One's Current Country Of Residence. Socially Undocumented: Identity And Immigration Justice Challenges Such A Pure Legalistic Understanding By Arguing That Being Undocumented Should Not Always Be Conceptualized Along Such Lines. To Be Socially Undocumented, It Argues, Is To Possess A Real, Visible, And Embodied Social Identity That Does Not Always Track One's Actual Legal Status In The United States. By Integrating A Descriptive/phenomenological Account Of Socially Undocumented Identity With A Normative/political Account Of How The Oppression With Which It Is Associated Ought To Be Dealt With As A Matter Of Social Justice, This Book Offers A New Vision Of Immigration Ethics. It Addresses Concrete Ethical Challenges Associated With Immigration, Such As The Question Of Whether Open Borders Are Morally Required, The Militarization Of The Mexico-u.s. Border, The Perilous Journey That Many Mexican And Central American Migrants Undertake To Get To The United States, The Difficult Experiences Of Many Socially Undocumented Women Who Cross U.s. Borders To Seek Prenatal Care While Visibly Pregnant, And More-- Provided By Publisher.
This book investigates the limitations of legalistic definitions of undocumented status by proposing a new framework centered on the concept of being 'socially undocumented.' Amy Reed-Sandoval, a political philosopher, challenges the conventional reliance on legal authorization as the sole metric for understanding the migrant experience. By integrating phenomenological descriptions of lived identity with normative political theory, she argues that social identity often exists independently of legal status, necessitating a shift in how immigration ethics and social justice are conceptualized.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in political philosophy and migration studies recognize this work as a significant contribution to the ethics of immigration. Readers frequently note the clarity with which the author bridges abstract philosophical concepts with the tangible, lived realities of marginalized populations.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
New York, NY, United States of America : Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
0190619848
ISBN-13:
9780190619848
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