Lives in Limbo: Undocumented and Coming of Age in America - A Powerful Memoir About Immigration, Identity & Growing Up as an Undocumented Youth in the U.S. | Perfect for Book Clubs, Social Studies & Understanding the Immigrant Experience
Lives in Limbo: Undocumented and Coming of Age in America - A Powerful Memoir About Immigration, Identity & Growing Up as an Undocumented Youth in the U.S. | Perfect for Book Clubs, Social Studies & Understanding the Immigrant Experience

Lives in Limbo: Undocumented and Coming of Age in America - A Powerful Memoir About Immigration, Identity & Growing Up as an Undocumented Youth in the U.S. | Perfect for Book Clubs, Social Studies & Understanding the Immigrant Experience

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Product Description

“My world seems upside down. I have grown up but I feel like I’m moving backward. And I can’t do anything about it.” –Esperanza Over two million of the nation’s eleven million undocumented immigrants have lived in the United States since childhood. Due to a broken immigration system, they grow up to uncertain futures. In Lives in Limbo, Roberto G. Gonzales introduces us to two groups: the college-goers, like Ricardo, who had good grades and a strong network of community support that propelled him to college and DREAM Act organizing but still landed in a factory job a few short years after graduation, and the early-exiters, like Gabriel, who failed to make meaningful connections in high school and started navigating dead-end jobs, immigration checkpoints, and a world narrowly circumscribed by legal limitations. This vivid ethnography explores why highly educated undocumented youth share similar work and life outcomes with their less-educated peers, despite the fact that higher education is touted as the path to integration and success in America. Mining the results of an extraordinary twelve-year study that followed 150 undocumented young adults in Los Angeles, Lives in Limbo exposes the failures of a system that integrates children into K-12 schools but ultimately denies them the rewards of their labor.

Customer Reviews

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Amazingly descriptive and nuanced for such an ambitious topic as a liminal population that is highly vulnerable. Very comprehensive into difficulties faced, but done from a humanizing perspective, then addressing policy solutions and debates that have come up in the past few years (as far as the book was written) and thus illustrating the ignorance and caricatures used in these debates