Transcript Slide 1

Undocumented (Illegal)
Immigrants
in the
United States
From: Shadowed Lives: Undocumented Immigrants in American Society, by Leo Chavez
Separation
Migrating for work is culturally and
socially constructed
1. U.S. Employers lure Mexican workers to the
U.S.
2. Part of family history/stories told of
opportunity by relatives
3.Part of local folklore, a popular theme in
traditional and modern Mexican songs.
Migration as a Part of Family History
Example: Enrique Valenzuela
1. Father worked in Bracero Program for 12 yrs.
• From 1942-1967, a work program where the U.S.
government allowed American employers to
hire Mexican laborers for short periods of time
2. Enrique worked on a rancho (ejido) while his
father was in the U.S., soon left because there was
no work and family was going hungry (1963)
Enrique cont…
3. Enrique went to Mexico city to find work: first
worked selling produce, then worked in a small
factory making cars earning 22 American dollars a
week,
Only enough to pay his rent.
4. In 1970 his father was working in San Diego and
Enrique wanted to follow in his father’s footsteps
5. His father laid the foundation for Enrique’s move
and illustrates that most Mexicans try to find work
in their country before moving to the U.S.
Target Earners
1. Earn a certain amount of money then return
to their country
2.Common among young unmarried men and
women who want to help their parents
3.Immigrants will use money for a number of
purposes
A. Save money to build a house in Mexico
B. For college in Mexico
Central American Immigrants
Reasons for immigrating to the U.S.
1. Dissatisfaction with the local economy
2. Political conflict
a. Rebel military groups fighting the government
b. Disappearances/kidnapping
c. Torture
d. Arbitrary Arrest
Crossing the Border
Border Tunnel
Border Tunnel
Costs
Coyote: an experienced Mexican who will help
illegals cross the border.
• Costs thousands of dollars
• Many times Coyotes will take money and not
assist families or leave families in remote
areas
• Coyotes lie about the money they received
and ask for more
Dangers
1.Crossing rivers: drowning
2.Deserts: Hot and dry in the day time, cold
and dry at night, die of heat exhaustion
3.Mountains: many illegals become
disoriented and cannot find their way out of
the mountains or deserts
4.Border Patrol: have been known to shoot
immigrants
5.American citizens: vigilantly groups
(minutemen)
Dangers Cont….
6. Crossing busy highways in southern
California, immigrants have misjudged the
speed of vehicles and have been killed
Life Outside San Diego
Living camps outside of major cities
• Illegals will dig holes in the ground and find
cardboard to cover themselves in to protect
them from the elements
• Advantage to living in a hole: Border
patrol cannot see them
• Disadvantage: Fleas, rats, snakes, water
from rain, brush fires, and disease have
all been known to kill immigrants
Life Outside San Diego Cont…
Disease: from lack of clean drinking water,
waste remove, and using such things as
pesticide buckets for drinking water
Gang violence: Gangs routinely come into the
camps and arbitrarily kill workers for no
reason…or for initiation into a gang
Learning to Live as an “Illegal Alien”
Living in Constant Fear
Many illegals have stated the following:
• “We’re living in a chicken coop”
• “In all of the these 16 years I’ve lived in the U.S.
it feels if though I’ve been in jail. I don’t feel
free. I came to this country to work not to do
things you shouldn’t do. If you go out, like
when you go out for fun, it’s always in the back
of your mind, will the INS show up? Or when
you go to work you think all the time, from the
moment you walk out of your home you think,
will the INS stop me on the way or when I’m at
work?”
Living in Constant Fear Cont…
• Home as a refuge
• Parents will not let children outside of the
home
• Parents not apart of child’s life in school
because of fear
• Illegals will not seek medical help when
needed
• Illegals find it difficult to seek legal help
when they are wronged