Departmental Colloquium
Abstract: Undocumented Mexican adult caregivers face multiple binds from contemporary US migration governance. Major federal public benefits programs have long excluded them, while the steady militarization of the US-Mexico border has cut off circular migration just as an infusion of interior enforcement has brought deportation threat to their doorsteps. With few viable legal channels for visas, people who manage to cross from Mexico without authorization are sealed into the United States, a country that has not enacted a major legalization since 1986, despite its dependence on immigrants to sustain labor markets and community life. As a result, of the estimated 10-11 million undocumented people in the US, the average adult is 39 years old, likely born in Mexico, and has lived without authorization for 15 years, transitioning from young adulthood to middle age. How do these immigrants manage the constraints of “illegality” as they engage in unpaid caregiving for children and aging parents across borders and over time? Theorizing the temporalities of immigrant “illegality” through the case of domestic care work, I draw on three waves of longitudinal data from 51 undocumented Mexican adults to chart the emergence of an undocumented “sandwich generation,” wherein middle-aged immigrants provide care for their children and, from afar, for parents aging in communities of origin. This study illuminates the many ways that “illegality” moves with immigrants across time, impacting domains as intimate as domestic care work. Rather than produce static or flat effects, the oppressive weight of “illegality” constrains caregiving differentially, and in accordance with the life course-related needs of care givers and receivers embedded in the structural realities of US migration governance.
Abstract: In 2015, the central region of Nepal was struck by a 7.8 magnitude earthquake and 7.3 magnitude “aftershock.” The disaster claimed over 9,000 lives and inspired a brief shock of humanitarian care for the mental health of Nepali people. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in the aftermath of the earthquakes, this talk explores what disaster generates, and the relationship between crisis and care along a Himalayan fault line. As crisis claims pushed mental health into the center of public discourse, over 300,000 “beneficiaries” received mental health and psychosocial support, many for the first time in their lives. Grasped through the frame of crisis, previously unexceptional forms of chronic suffering were momentarily transformed into problems worthy of concern. While humanitarianism enacted forms of violence when suffering was met with transient care, brief encounters between counselors and clients also created unexpected possibilities—to discover novel treatments, to visualize different futures, and to experience solidarity and gentleness. By holding this dynamic in tension, this talk offers a reparative reading that attends to both the limits and possibilities of transient care in times of disaster.