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Impact Factor:0.881 | Ranking:Cultural Studies 3 out of 38
Source:2013 Journal Citation Reports® (Thomson Reuters, 2014)

Making Undocumented Immigrants into a Legitimate Political Subject: Theoretical Observations from the United States and France

  1. Walter J. Nicholls
  1. University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  1. Walter J. Nicholls, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Amsterdam, Oudezijds Achterburgwal 185, Amsterdam 1012 DK, The Netherlands Email: w.j.nicholls{at}uva.nl

Abstract

Over the last 20 years, the global North has witnessed the growing prominence of immigrant rights movements. This article examines how this highly stigmatized population has achieved a certain degree of legitimacy in hostile political environments. The central claim of the article is that this kind of legitimacy is initially achieved through the efforts of activists to represent undocumented immigrants in ways that resonate with the normative values of the nation. The author examines how activist networks are formed to present their cases within national political fields and the effects of this process on the political identities of immigrants and their respective citizenship regimes. The process of gaining legitimacy is contradictory. It contributes to nationalizing the political identities of foreigners and reproducing the exclusionary logic of national citizenship regimes. But in doing this, it encourages those who cannot conform to national values to embrace more radical and universal conceptions of rights. The generation of competing discourses and notions of rights (national versus universal) therefore arises through struggles to make undocumented immigrants into legitimate political subjects.

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This Article

  1. Theory, Culture & Society vol. 30 no. 3 82-107
    All Versions of this Article:
    1. current version image indicatorVersion of Record - May 14, 2013
    2. OnlineFirst Version of Record - Apr 2, 2013
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