When Care is Conditional: Immigrants and the U.S. Safety Net

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UPC:
9780871544742
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Paperback
Publication Date:
1/8/2024
Release Date:
1/8/2024
Author:
Carrillo, Dani
Language:
English: Published; English: Original Language; English
Pages:
213
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From its inception, the public safety net in the United States has excluded many people because of their race, gendered roles, or other factors. As a result, they must prove their moral worthiness to get resources for themselves and their families. In When Care Is Conditional, sociologist Dani Carrillo reveals the ramifications of this conditional safety net by focusing on one particularly vulnerable population: undocumented immigrants. Through in-depth interviews with Latinx immigrants in northern California, Carrillo examines three circumstancesplace, gender, and immigration statusthat intersect to influence an individuals access to health care, food assistance, and other benefits. She demonstrates that place of residence affects undocumented immigrants ability to get care since more services are available in urban areas, where many immigrants cannot afford to live, than suburban areas, where public transportation is limited. She also shows that while both men and women who are undocumented have difficulty obtaining care, men often confront more challenges. Undocumented women who are pregnant or mothers are eligible for some government safety net programs and rely on informal coethnic networks or a guiding figurea relative, friend, neighbor, or coworkerwho explains how to get care and makes them feel confident in accessing it. Most undocumented men, in contrast, are not eligible for public programs except in a medical emergency and often lack someone to guide them directly to care. Men sometimes steer one another to jobs through worker centerswhere they may learn about various services and take advantage of those that increase their employability, like English or computer classesbut a culture of masculinity leads them to downplay medical problems and seek health care only in a crisis. As undocumented immigrants navigate this exclusionary system, Carrillo finds that they resist the rhetoric stigmatizing them as lawbreakers. Dismissing the importance of papers and highlighting their work ethic, they question the fairness of U.S. immigration policies and challenge ideas about who deserves care. Carrillo offers concrete recommendations, such as improving labor conditions and reexamining benefit eligibility, to increase access to care for not only undocumented immigrants but also people who have been excluded because of their race, criminal record, gender identity, sexual orientation, or disability. She argues that working with and across populations creates a powerful form of solidarity in advocating for inclusive care. When Care Is Conditional provides compelling insights into how safety net and immigration policies intersect to affect peoples everyday lives and calls for a cultural shift so that the United States can provide unconditional care for all.