2022
DOI: 10.26818/9780814214671
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Everyday Dirty Work: Invisibility, Communication, and Immigrant Labor

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“…Latinx workers' presence on the lawns of Southern California homeowners is not a unique feature of the region's service sector economies but part of a broader field of Latinx labor outside of the so‐called domestic sphere being staffed by an increasingly diverse worker pool coming from indigenous communities in Mexico as well migrants from El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras. These Latinx workers toil in restaurants (Wilson, 2017), hotels (Hsieh et al., 2014), in janitorial services (Alvarez, 2022), and street vending (Rosales, 2020), to name a few occupations. Their experiences today are shaped by a deep regional history of anti‐migrant policies and sentiment (Chavez, 2008), much of which has been leveraged through public health institutions (Molina, 2006) as well as carceral (Hernández, 2017), and deportation regimes (Baker, 2021).…”
Section: A Methods For Frontline Gardeningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Latinx workers' presence on the lawns of Southern California homeowners is not a unique feature of the region's service sector economies but part of a broader field of Latinx labor outside of the so‐called domestic sphere being staffed by an increasingly diverse worker pool coming from indigenous communities in Mexico as well migrants from El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras. These Latinx workers toil in restaurants (Wilson, 2017), hotels (Hsieh et al., 2014), in janitorial services (Alvarez, 2022), and street vending (Rosales, 2020), to name a few occupations. Their experiences today are shaped by a deep regional history of anti‐migrant policies and sentiment (Chavez, 2008), much of which has been leveraged through public health institutions (Molina, 2006) as well as carceral (Hernández, 2017), and deportation regimes (Baker, 2021).…”
Section: A Methods For Frontline Gardeningmentioning
confidence: 99%