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UndocuAsians: Lived Experiences and Social Movement Activism Across the Diaspora

Editat de Kevin Escudero, Rachel Freeman-Wong Cuvânt înainte de Ju Hong Contribuţii de Cynthia M. Alcantar, Victoria Kim, ‘Inoke Hafoka, Trisha Mazumder, Set Hernandez, Sara P. Alvarez, Tracy Lachica Buenavista, Esther Yoona Cho, Amandeep Kaur, Amritpal Kaur, Jaspreet Kaur, Pratishtha Khanna, Set Hernandez Rongkilyo, Jessica Law, Zhelin Li, Bo Thai, Rikka J. Venturanza, Huyen "Kiki" Vo, Siyue Lena Wang, Madison Villanueva
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 13 ian 2026 – vârsta ani
Asian immigrants comprise over 10% of the national undocumented immigrant population and Asian Americans are the fastest growing racial/ethnic group in the United States today. Asian undocumented communities, alongside their Latinx and Black undocumented counterparts, have also emphasized the importance of their racial/ethnic identities alongside their immigrant legal status in their organizing. UndocuAsians tells the story of the contemporary US immigrant rights movement with a focus on Asian undocumented immigrant narratives drawing on personal reflections and research studies by self-identified undocuAsian organizers and scholars from Asian immigrant backgrounds. Topics discussed in the volume include activists’ navigation of racialized “illegality,” the importance of chosen and biological family, pathways in the pursuit of higher education, the role of faith communities in the lives of Asian undocumented immigrants, and healing. Combined, these essays provide a diverse portrait of the vibrant, powerful community of Asian undocumented immigrants today.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781978820258
ISBN-10: 1978820259
Pagini: 226
Ilustrații: 3 color and 1 B-W images
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Rutgers University Press
Colecția Rutgers University Press

Notă biografică

KEVIN ESCUDERO is an assistant professor of American studies and ethnic studies and affiliated faculty member in the Department of Sociology, the Population Studies and Training Center, and the Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative at Brown University, Rhode Island. He is the author of Organizing While Undocumented: Immigrant Youth's Political Activism under the Law.

RACHEL FREEMAN-WONG is a postdoctoral research associate for the Population Studies and Training Center at Brown University, Rhode Island. She has worked with immigrant advocacy organizations including The UndocuScholars Project at UCLA.
 

Cuprins

Foreword xi
JU HONG
“It’s Okay” xv
BO THAI
Introduction 1
KEVIN ESCUDERO AND RACHEL FREEMAN-WONG
PART ONE
Historical Context and Theorizing the Nexus of Race and “Illegality”
1 Toward a Critical Understanding of the Historical and Sociopolitical Contexts for Asian American College Students in Mixed-Status Im/migrant Families 
RIKKA DE JOYA VENTURANZA
2 Negotiating Racialized “Illegality”
JESSICA LAW
PART TWO
Community-Based Methodological Approaches and Reclaiming Representations of Asian Undocumented Immigrant Experiences
3 Tsismis/Chisme as an Undocumented Community-Responsive Tool: Co-Conspiratorial Research to Action
TRACY LACHICA BUENAVISTA
4 “Not Your Model Minority”: Undocumented and Multilingual Asian Activists at the Margins of the University
SARA P. LOPEZ AMEZQUITA
5 Sacred Silhouettes: The Legacy of Brown Girl Joy Productions
AMRITPAL KAUR, AMANDEEP KAUR, AND JASPREET KAUR
PART THREE
Family, Faith, and Navigating Higher Education in the United States
6 Given and Chosen Family: The Central Pillar for Undocumented Asian College Students’ Value for Civic Engagement
CYNTHIA MARIBEL ALCANTAR, RACHEL FREEMAN-WONG, VICTORIA KIM, ‘INOKE HAFOKA, TRISHA MAZUMDER, AND SET HERNANDEZ
7 “Rooted Around Church”: The Role of the Korean Protestant Church in the Lives of Undocumented Korean Young Adults
ESTHER YOONA CHO
8 Chardi Kala: Resilience and Perseverance Through Adversity
PRATISHTHA KHANNA
9 Embracing Dreams Against Odds: A DACA Recipient’s Reflection on Navigating Higher Education and a Career in STEM
ZHELIN JEFF LI
PART FOUR
Mental Health, Activism, and Community Healing
10 The Intersection of Identity: Navigating My Undocumented Asian Experience and Becoming an UndocuAsian Mental Health Professional
HUYEN “KIKI” VO
11 Recollecting Resistance: A Retrospection on UPLIFT’s UndocuAsian Community Organizing During the DACA Era and Trump Administration
SIYUE LENA WANG AND MADISON VILLANUEVA
Epilogue
RACHEL FREEMAN-WONG AND KEVIN ESCUDERO
Appendix
Acknowledgments
Notes on Contributors
Index

Recenzii

"UndocuAsians offers a timely contribution to immigration literature. Historically grounded and conceptually rich, the centerpieces are the revelatory stories of individuals who fight for a more humane system. It urges us toward a compassionate future and to rethink what it means to live as undocumented with dignity, resistance, and hope."
"Asian Americans have never been less of a monolith. Our community is more diverse, more complex, and more undocumented than ever before, and UndocuAsians unpacks this state of affairs intimately."
"In a nation marked by its complexity and contradictions, UndocuAsians shines a light on the important yet seldom told stories of undocumented Asian immigrants. This anthology weaves together a rich tapestry of personal reflections and scholarly research from activists and experts. The authors invite you into an intimate space where vulnerability meets resilience. It is not just a book—it is a call to action."

"While Asians are one of the fastest growing racial groups in the undocumented community, they are often omitted from broader public discourse and academic scholarship. Timely and relevant, each chapter provides an entryway to understand the nuances in the lives of undocumented Asians in a way that humanizes those experiences."

Descriere

UndocuAsians tells the timely, compelling story of the contemporary US immigrant rights movement with a focus on Asian undocumented immigrant narratives. It does so by drawing on personal reflections and research articles by self-identified undocuAsian organizers and scholars from Asian immigrant backgrounds.