Research studies indicate that, undocumented immigrants, in everyday life, are perpetually affianced in social relations with the migrants who are legal as well as the citizens. They live in a close juxtaposition to various documented persons categories. Their illegality may be immaterial on a day to day basis to most of their activities and only becomes an issue in some context. Sudden legal reality is superimposed on their daily life even though they are unidentified from those around them much of the time. Illegal migrants are primarily labor migrants.
As revealed by the various resources, the implementation deepened as the border increases. the violence linked with crossing the border. More retributive measures absorbed at detained migrants have made it problematic for undocumented Latinos to labor in the United States on an impermanent or periodic basis. The work force from undocumented Latino migrants permanently settle and voluntarily become more less likely to periodically return to Mexico. Those who successfully cross the desert today are aware of the magnitude of this accomplishment.
Valid case studies have revealed that, there has been a heightened security on the United States border in the unauthorized crossing areas that are near urban ports of entry. It has shifted to the remote regions for the undocumented migration. It is evident that the areas are more penetrable but the conditions for the crossing are more difficult. The areas include the Sonoran desert of Arizona . Some migrants enter the United States undetected on food by the help of a complex industry of smuggling that has developed in the northern Mexico. A well-established process of the desert crossing whereby there is the use of items that include the dark clothes and the water bottles. These are used as the tools that the undocumented migrants use for maneuver and endurance.
These common items, once brought into the desert always take a different meaning and function for the men, women, and the children that try to cross the border every year. The items are then deposited along the many Mexico to Arizona many trails. They are the tools for the undocumented and they are highly relied on so as to avoid any detection by the patrol in the border hence to survive the Sonoran desert. The lives of thousands of people have been claimed by the desert. After the executive action that was taken by president Obama, those who were crossing the borders became aware of the obstacles that are generally involved in the process. Research studies reveals that with the emotional and physical difficulties that make focusing on the minutia of material culture quite challenging, the border crossing still become disordered and widespread. Failure to recognize the many negative impacts of the black water bottles which many used to get into the united states, caused many people to incur injury and death. In addition then the different types of techniques ineffectiveness was so much delicate and also difficult to disentangle from the violence, border crossing suffering and also the general chaos. Migrants expected the process to be miserable and before migration then the technique used might have led to an additional discomfort hence they avoided (Whiteford 11).
As revealed in various documentary records, there are still long time undocumented migrants and the recently deployed undocumented migrants who are entering the desert, although trepidations are at an all-time low. The connection which continues to shape the BCSS is still active. It is the connection of suffering, economics, contradictions as well as the politics. The undocumented everyday life has become saturated by the regimes that receives impose of the state through the laws of immigration. The extent to which legislation is only one feature of the law is being demonstrated by the scholarship on the history of the United States naturalization, citizenship, and immigration. The judicial cases and administrative decisions that are affecting the implementation of the deportation and admission procedures are the policies that the research law requires an investigation on. In addition, also the regulating access to employment policies, housing, eligibility for several social benefits of welfare, and education.
Conclusion
The labor of the undocumented migrants has been criminalized and is illegal. The labor is also subjected to excessive and extraordinary forms of policing. The undocumented migrants who are in the United States have been denied human rights that are fundamental as well as many elementary social entitlements. After the migration, they are consigned to an uncertain sociopolitical quandary and this comes normally with a little or rather no recourse to any protection impression from the law (Orozco, 41).
This category of illegal migrants effectively serves to create as well as to maintain a legally vulnerable and thus, relatively tractable and the labor reserve becomes cheap. This critical insight into the illegal migrant consequences is insufficient as far as its origin is not examined and hence neutralized.
Works Cited
Genova, Nicholas P. De. "Migrant "Illegality" and Deportability in Everyday Life." Annual Review of Anthropology, Vol. 31 (2002) (2014): 419-447.
Jason De Le´. "Better to Be Hot than Caught”: Excavating the Conflicting Roles of Migrant Material Culture." AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST (2012): 447-495.
Orozco, Manuel. "Globalization and Migration: The Impact of Family Remittances in Latin America." Latin American Politics and Society, Vol. 44, No. 2 (2002): 41-66.
Whiteford, Jeremy Slack and Scott. "Violence and migration on the arizona-Sonora Border." Human Organization, Vol. 70, No. 1, (2011): 11-21.