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Bordering on Indifference : Immigration Agents Negotiating Race and Morality.

De Gruyter Princeton University Press Complete eBook-Package 2025 Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Vega, Irene I.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement--Officials and employees--Social conditions.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
U.S. Border Patrol--Officials and employees--Social conditions.
U.S. Border Patrol.
Latin America--Emigration and immigration.
Latin America.
United States--Emigration and immigration--Social aspects.
United States.
Genre:
Electronic books.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (233 pages)
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
Princeton : Princeton University Press, 2025.
Summary:
"How a largely Latino/a workforce of immigration agents reconciles the moral ambiguities of its work. Immigration agents have a frontline view of the racial, economic, and legal inequalities that undocumented migration reflects--and yet most agents do not think of the role their jobs play in those inequalities. Instead, they consider themselves law enforcers, trained to confine their work strictly to crime control and security. In Bordering on Indifference, Irene Vega offers an original, detailed analysis of the rationales that shape how U.S. immigration agents understand and carry out their professional responsibilities. Drawing on interviews with ninety immigration agents--Border Patrol Agents and ICE Deportation Officers, most of whom are Mexican Americans from the region around the border--Vega examines why they took the job and how their training and socialization shape the ways that they grapple with the racial and moral issues raised by their work.Vega shows that indifference is the bureaucratic resource that allows agents to look away from the most morally ambiguous aspects of their work and helps them cultivate legitimacy for their employer. She traces the development of the agents' "moral economy"--the configuration of norms, values, and sensibilities that undergirds how they perform their work. She also shows how the immigration system benefits from minoritized bureaucrats' labor. With Bordering on Indifference, Vega opens the closed doors of nondescript government buildings and goes into remote areas of the Southwestern borderlands to uncover the hidden normative world that immigration enforcement agents inhabit."-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Taking the job
Becoming an agent
Between caring control and disinterested professionalism
Denying responsibility
Cultivating legitimacy.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 187-207) and index.
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
ISBN:
9780691262109
0691262101
OCLC:
1503846170

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