Clandestine Crossings
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David Spener
About this book
Clandestine Crossings delivers an in-depth description and analysis of the experiences of working-class Mexican migrants at the beginning of the twenty-first century as they enter the United States surreptitiously with the help of paid guides known as...
Author / Editor information
David Spener is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Trinity University. He is the editor of Adult Biliteracy and coeditor of The U.S.-Mexico Border: Transcending Divisions, Contesting Identities and Free Trade and Uneven Development: The North American Apparel Industry after NAFTA. Visit his Web site at http://www.trinity.edu/clandestinecrossings.
Reviews
In this path-breaking book, David Spener investigates coyotaje—the strategies and practices employed by those ('coyotes') whom migrants hire to help them enter the United States clandestinely—as no other author has, in order to shed valuable light on the experiences of Mexican men and women compelled to cross illegally given the impossibility of obtaining US government authorization.
Douglas S. Massey, Henry G. Bryant Professor of Sociology and Public AffairsPrinceton University, author of Beyond Smoke and Mirrors: Mexico-U.S. Migration in an Age of Economic Integration:
When it comes to the Mexico-U.S. border and the people who cross it, no one knows the facts on the ground better than David Spener. I learned a tremendous amount from Clandestine Crossings—and I've been studying Mexican immigration for thirty years! In its combination of historical context, ethnographic detail, and hard fact the book is unmatched. It should be required reading for legislators in Washington and the citizens who elect them. Clandestine Crossings effectively destroys all the myths and misinformation surrounding international migration in North America.
Josiah McC. Heyman, University of Texas at El Paso, author of Life and Labor on the Border: Working People of Northeastern Sonora, Mexico, 1886–1986:
Readers all over the world will be interested in how David Spener analyzes human smugglers. His clearly written, well-organized, and vivid argument for understanding coyotaje as a process made of relations will have a significant impact on migration studies. The data are rich and interesting: Spener was able to learn an impressive amount about coyotes, considering the hidden nature of their work.
Joseph Nevins, Vassar College, author of Dying to Live: A Story of U.S. Immigration in an Age of Global Apartheid:
Clandestine Crossings is both instructive and provocative in the best sense of the word. David Spener's highly unique and important research and analysis will prompt a great deal of interest and deep engagement from readers in migration studies, border studies, and Chicano/a studies, as well as in anthropology, geography, political science, and sociology. There may be no one else in a position to combine the skills and knowledge that Spener has brought to this project with his willingness and ability to challenge hegemonic notions of coyotes and coyotaje—and, by extension, the U.S. boundary-enforcement apparatus. This book deserves as wide an audience as possible: what it has to offer is not only fascinating and unique but also of great importance.
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