4.3 Article

Transformative Effects of Immigration Law: Immigrants' Personal and Social Metamorphoses through Regularization

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY
Volume 121, Issue 6, Pages 1818-1855

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/685103

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Funding

  1. Cowden Distinguished Professorship at Arizona State University
  2. Foundation Distinguished Professorship at the University of Kansas
  3. American Bar Foundation
  4. American Association of University Women
  5. University of California Institute for Mexico

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This article examines the enduring alterations in behaviors, practices, and self-image that immigrants' evolving knowledge of and participation in the legalization process facilitate. Relying on close to 200 interviews with immigrants from several national origin groups in Los Angeles and Phoenix, the authors identify transformations that individuals enact in their intimate and in their civic lives as they come in contact with U.S. immigration law en route to and as a result of regularization. Findings illustrate the power of the state to control individuals' activities and mind-sets in ways that are not explicitly formal or bureaucratic. The barriers the state creates, which push immigrants to the legal margins, together with anti-immigrant hostility, create conditions under which immigrants are likely to undertake transformative, lasting changes in their lives. These transformations reify notions of the deserving immigrant vis-a-vis the law, alter the legalization process for the immigrant population at large, and, ultimately, shape integration dynamics.

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