Abstract

Synopsis This paper is interested in placing the literature on social reproduction in conversation with that of migrant illegalization—the identification of certain migrants as not welcome in a nation-state both through discursive and material processes. More specifically, I am interested in how migrant illegalization interlocks with other forms of social location to designate certain bodies as open to exploitation and exclusion. The paper focuses on a case study of Mexican migrants with precarious immigration status and their experiences in navigating the embodied process of moving through and working in the city of Toronto. I propose that the interlocking of migrant illegalization and the profiling of bodies as exploitable and suspicious limits precarious status migrants’ – those that do not have permanent residence or citizenship – ability to access social goods, decent work and the networks required to improve their social context.

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