Td. Wilson, Anti-immigrant sentiment and the problem of reproduction/maintenance in Mexican immigration to the United States, CRIT ANTHR, 20(2), 2000, pp. 191-213
This article explores the links between 1) the growing militarization of th
e US-Mexico border; 2) state legislation such as California's Proposition 1
87 designed to deny undocumented workers and their non-citizen wives and ch
ildren state-funded medical, educational, and other social services; 3) the
call by some sectors of the population to deny US citizenship to children
born in the US to undocumented immigrants, but in most cases also to legall
y permanent residents who have not yet acquired citizenship; and 5) threats
of deportation of undocumented workers, cases highly publicized in both th
e US and Mexico. St is argued that these phenomena are related to the desir
e to re-separate the processes of production and reproduction among the now
more permanent Mexican labor force working in the US. With the fall of the
USSR no other nation has taken upon itself the moral task of criticizing h
uman rights abuses in the US, providing a more permissive environment for t
he abuses perpetrated against Mexican workers and their families.