Identity loan: The moral economy of migrant document exchange in California's Central Valley

被引:19
|
作者
Horton, Sarah [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Colorado, Dept Anthropol, Denver, CO 80217 USA
关键词
illegality; legal anthropology; moral economies; global apartheid; documentation; Mexican migrants; farmworkers; REPRODUCTION; HEALTH; LABOR; HIV;
D O I
10.1111/amet.12115
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
Identity loan is common among U.S. farmworkers. In contrast to identity theft, it is a voluntary exchange in which citizens and legal permanent residents lend unauthorized migrants their identity documents so that the latter may obtain a job. Drawing on nine months of ethnographic fieldwork and interviews with 45 migrant farmworkers in California's Central Valley, I show that federal and state policies have encouraged identity loan as a mode of reciprocal gift-giving in resource- and document-poor migrant communities. Document exchange benefits identity donors by increasing their unemployment payments and directly depositing deductions from unauthorized migrants' wages into their Social Security accounts. While many scholars theorize that unauthorized status serves as a hidden subsidy for the state, this study illuminates the microprocesses through which ordinary citizens and residents agentively vie to divert this profit reserve into their own pockets.
引用
收藏
页码:55 / 67
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Down in the valley: Trajectories of injection initiation among young injectors in California's Central Valley
    Syvertsen, Jennifer L.
    Paquette, Catherine E.
    Pollini, Robin A.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DRUG POLICY, 2017, 44 : 41 - 49
  • [42] Drought, Water Law, and the Origins of California's Central Valley Project
    Charles, Jeffrey
    AGRICULTURAL HISTORY, 2019, 93 (02) : 378 - 379
  • [43] Brine Disposal Options for Small Systems in California's Central Valley
    Jensen, Vivian B.
    Darby, Jeannie L.
    JOURNAL AMERICAN WATER WORKS ASSOCIATION, 2016, 108 (05): : E276 - E289
  • [44] City Adoption of Environmentally Sustainable Policies in California's Central Valley
    Lubell, Mark
    Feiock, Richard
    Handy, Susan
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN PLANNING ASSOCIATION, 2009, 75 (03) : 293 - 308
  • [45] Estimating shallow compressional velocity variations in California's Central Valley
    Vasco, Donald W.
    Pride, Steven R.
    Nakagawa, Seiji
    Plesch, Andreas
    Shaw, John H.
    GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, 2024, 236 (03) : 1680 - 1698
  • [46] Management of small mammals in a relict grassland in California's Central Valley
    Poopatanapong, A
    Kelt, DA
    TRANSACTIONS OF THE WESTERN SECTION OF THE WILDLIFE SOCIETY, VOL 35, 1999, 1999, : 15 - 21
  • [47] Reduced Tillage Tomato/Wheat Rotations in California's Central Valley
    Mitchell, Jeffrey P.
    Miyao, Gene M.
    Jackson, Jim J.
    Jackson, Lee F.
    Lanini, Tom
    Summers, Charlie G.
    Stapleton, Jim J.
    HORTSCIENCE, 2004, 39 (04) : 749 - 750
  • [48] Groundwater depletion in California’s Central Valley accelerates during megadrought
    Pang-Wei Liu
    James S. Famiglietti
    Adam J. Purdy
    Kyra H. Adams
    Avery L. McEvoy
    John T. Reager
    Rajat Bindlish
    David N. Wiese
    Cédric H. David
    Matthew Rodell
    Nature Communications, 13
  • [49] The Fall and Rise of the Wetlands of California's Great Central Valley.
    Stine, Jeffrey K.
    WESTERN HISTORICAL QUARTERLY, 2012, 43 (01) : 103 - 104
  • [50] The Dynamics of Social Indicator Research for California's Central Valley in Transition
    DeLugan, Robin M.
    Hernandez, Marcia D.
    Sylvester, Dari E.
    Weffer, Simon E.
    SOCIAL INDICATORS RESEARCH, 2011, 100 (02) : 259 - 271