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 Indus after NAFTA. Visit his website for this book at www.trinity.edu/clandestinecrossings.
Acknowledgments
p. vii
Terminology Used in This Book
p. xi
Introduction. Lives on the Line
p. 1
The Unfolding of Apartheid in South Texas: Domination, Resistance, and Migration
p. 28
Clandestine Crossing at the Beginning of the Twenty-first Century: The Long March through the Brush Country
p. 60
Coyotaje as a Cultural Practice Applied to Migration
p. 87
Coyotaje and Migration in the Contemporary Period
p. 121
Trust, Distrust, and Power: The Social Embeddedness of Coyote-Assisted Border-Crossings
p. 162
Passing Judgment: Coyotes in the Discourse of Clandestine Border-Crossing
p. 201
Conclusion. Ending Apartheid at the Border
p. 230
Data Sources and Research Methods
p. 237
Notes
p. 251
References
p. 271
Index
p. 293
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