Social Service Review
Volume 92, Issue 3, 2018, Pages 432-469

Evidencing violence and care along the central American migrant trail through Mexico (Article)

Doering-White J.*
  • a University of Michigan, United States

Abstract

This ethnographic study explores how migrant shelters that assist people migrating without authorization through Mexico mediate seemingly contradictory frameworks: human smuggling and humanitarianism. Amid intensified immigration enforcement and policing along migration routes, Central Americans crossing Mexico without authorization increasingly interact with smugglers. These interactions are often characterized as much by mutuality as they are by exploitation. Shelter workers relied on material and embodied signs to make tentative interpretations about these ambiguous dynamics of care and coercion without confronting potential smugglers explicitly. These findings build on previous studies that examine how social workers rely on different kinds of evidence to both reproduce and transform social inequities. Examining how shelter workers interact pragmatically with material objects, in addition to language, to mediate frameworks of humanitarianism and human smuggling informs social work practice with other criminalized populations who do not fit neatly into dichotomies of victimhood and victimization, or innocence and guilt. © 2018 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved.

Author Keywords

Care Humanitarianism Undocumented migration Evidence materiality violence Ethnography

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85051371536&doi=10.1086%2f699196&partnerID=40&md5=b070b6d76da6fd7bb2fa9730c5013f47

DOI: 10.1086/699196
ISSN: 00377961
Cited by: 2
Original Language: English