Dissenting migrants: the undocumented youth struggle over rights and belonging in the United States

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Cardoso, Andréia Fressatti
Data de Publicação: 2025
Tipo de documento: Tese
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da USP
Texto Completo: https://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8131/tde-27112025-163112/
Resumo: The aim of this dissertation is to assess the experiments on rights and belonging of the undocumented youth movement in the American public scene. We began questioning if the subject of rights must necessarily be a (national) citizen, framing the issue of the right to have rights and its companion, the right to belong, through the lenses of undocumented migrants. By critically engaging with Arendt\'s perplexities of the rights of man and Rancière\'s politics of human rights, we assess the claim for rights of the undocumented youth in the United States, also known in literature as the 1.5 generation. Since they grew up interacting with state institutions that do not demand papers, such as school, they developed their legal consciousness based on stigma rather than fear, and feel that their belonging to the community had been robbed once they transitioned to adulthood. We follow how the youth were mobilized first around the \"Dreamer\" identity and reclaimed it through more intersectional lenses, proposing two claims in the American public scene: \"undocumented and unafraid\" and \"home is here.\" Whereas the former is interpreted as an assertion of rights subjectivity despite and through their deportable bodies\' vulnerability, the latter is read as a claim for belonging and citizenship in a country that does not recognize such a claim. As we recount the undocumented struggle around the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors Act (DREAM Act) and the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), we propose the framework of citizenship as belonging to analyze the different experiments in rights and belonging that were advanced by these undocumented migrants. We argue that membership and belonging refer to different definitions of citizenship. Membership, which is directly challenged by the claim of undocumented migrants to a \"home,\" is an exclusive, bounded, and bordered category, with close ties to the nation-state and its emplacement tool, nationality. Belonging, on the other hand, is evaluated in three interconnected dimensions: (i) the dialogical construction of the self; (ii) the performative claim of the right to have rights; and (iii) the aesthetic claim of the right to belong. Therefore, by defining themselves as \"undocumented and unafraid,\" and claiming the U.S. as their home, including by enacting law and legal language, the undocumented youth positioned their right to belong and enacted their meanings of citizenship, which are not necessarily linked to papers. This research is positioned in the fields of critical citizenship and migration studies, and follows a grounded theoretical approach. Methodologically, migrant narratives, collected through in depth interviews conducted in the United States between 2021 and 2024, have been centered and presented horizontally to the literature\'s concepts and understandings of the struggle
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spelling Dissenting migrants: the undocumented youth struggle over rights and belonging in the United StatesMigrantes no dissenso: a luta por direitos e pertencimento da juventude indocumentada nos Estados UnidosBelongingCidadaniaCitizenshipDireito a ter direitosJuventude indocumentadaMigrantes indocumentadosPertencimentoRight to have rightsUndocumented migrantsUndocumented youthThe aim of this dissertation is to assess the experiments on rights and belonging of the undocumented youth movement in the American public scene. We began questioning if the subject of rights must necessarily be a (national) citizen, framing the issue of the right to have rights and its companion, the right to belong, through the lenses of undocumented migrants. By critically engaging with Arendt\'s perplexities of the rights of man and Rancière\'s politics of human rights, we assess the claim for rights of the undocumented youth in the United States, also known in literature as the 1.5 generation. Since they grew up interacting with state institutions that do not demand papers, such as school, they developed their legal consciousness based on stigma rather than fear, and feel that their belonging to the community had been robbed once they transitioned to adulthood. We follow how the youth were mobilized first around the \"Dreamer\" identity and reclaimed it through more intersectional lenses, proposing two claims in the American public scene: \"undocumented and unafraid\" and \"home is here.\" Whereas the former is interpreted as an assertion of rights subjectivity despite and through their deportable bodies\' vulnerability, the latter is read as a claim for belonging and citizenship in a country that does not recognize such a claim. As we recount the undocumented struggle around the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors Act (DREAM Act) and the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), we propose the framework of citizenship as belonging to analyze the different experiments in rights and belonging that were advanced by these undocumented migrants. We argue that membership and belonging refer to different definitions of citizenship. Membership, which is directly challenged by the claim of undocumented migrants to a \"home,\" is an exclusive, bounded, and bordered category, with close ties to the nation-state and its emplacement tool, nationality. Belonging, on the other hand, is evaluated in three interconnected dimensions: (i) the dialogical construction of the self; (ii) the performative claim of the right to have rights; and (iii) the aesthetic claim of the right to belong. Therefore, by defining themselves as \"undocumented and unafraid,\" and claiming the U.S. as their home, including by enacting law and legal language, the undocumented youth positioned their right to belong and enacted their meanings of citizenship, which are not necessarily linked to papers. This research is positioned in the fields of critical citizenship and migration studies, and follows a grounded theoretical approach. Methodologically, migrant narratives, collected through in depth interviews conducted in the United States between 2021 and 2024, have been centered and presented horizontally to the literature\'s concepts and understandings of the struggleO objetivo desta tese é avaliar os experimentos por direitos e pertencimento do movimento da juventude indocumentada na cena pública estadunidense. Inicialmente, perguntamos se o sujeito de direitos deve necessariamente ser o cidadão (nacional), enquadrando a questão pelo direito a ter direitos e seu acompanhante, o direito de pertencer. Ao engajar criticamente com as perplexidades dos direitos do homem de Arendt e a política dos direitos humanos de Rancière, avaliamos a demanda por direitos da juventude indocumentada, também conhecida na literatura como a geração 1,5. Por terem crescido em interação com instituições que não demandam documentos, como a escola, eles desenvolveram uma consciência jurídica baseada em estigma ao invés de medo, e sentem que seu pertencimento à comunidade lhes é roubado quando transitam para a vida adulta. Nós acompanhamos como a juventude foi mobilizada primeiro em torno da identidade de \"Dreamer\" e a reivindicou por lentes mais interseccionais ao proporem dois gritos na cena pública estadunidense: \"indocumentado e sem medo\" e \"nosso lar é aqui\". Enquanto a primeira é interpretada como sua afirmação de subjetividade de direitos a despeito e em razão da vulnerabilidade de seus corpos deportáveis, a segunda é lida como uma demanda por pertencimento e cidadania em um país que não a reconhece. Ao narrar a luta em torno do Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors Act (DREAM Act) e do Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), propomos um enquadramento de cidadania enquanto pertencimento para analisar os diferentes experimentos de direitos e pertencimento que feitos por esses migrantes indocumentados. Nosso argumento é que filiação nacional (membership) e pertencimento (belonging) apontam para conceitos distintos de cidadania. A filiação nacional, conceito diretamente desafiado pela demanda de migrantes indocumentados a um \"lar\", é uma categoria exclusiva, limitada e enfronteirada com relações próximas ao Estado-nação e à nacionalidade. Pertencimento, por outro lado, é avaliado a partir de três dimensões interconectadas: (i) a construção dialógica de si; (ii) a demanda performativa pelo direito a ter direitos; e (iii) a demanda estética pelo direito de pertencer. Assim, ao se definirem como \"indocumentados e sem medo\" e ao afirmarem os Estados Unidos como seu lar, inclusive em ações pelo direito e com a linguagem jurídica, a juventude indocumentada posiciona seu direito a pertencer e agiu em seus sentidos de cidadania, que não necessariamente se referem a documentos. Esta pesquisa se posiciona nos campos de estudos críticos de cidadania e migração e segue uma abordagem de grounded theory. Metodologicamente, narrativas de migrantes, coletadas por entrevistas em profundidade conduzidas nos Estados Unidos entre 2021 e 2024, foram enquadradas e apresentadas em relação horizontal às categorias e interpretações da literatura sobre o conflito investigadoBiblioteca Digitais de Teses e Dissertações da USPAraujo, Cicero Romao Resende deCardoso, Andréia Fressatti2025-09-02info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesisapplication/pdfhttps://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8131/tde-27112025-163112/reponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da USPinstname:Universidade de São Paulo (USP)instacron:USPLiberar o conteúdo para acesso público.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccesseng2025-11-27T18:41:02Zoai:teses.usp.br:tde-27112025-163112Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertaçõeshttp://www.teses.usp.br/PUBhttp://www.teses.usp.br/cgi-bin/mtd2br.plvirginia@if.usp.br|| atendimento@aguia.usp.br||virginia@if.usp.bropendoar:27212025-11-27T18:41:02Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da USP - Universidade de São Paulo (USP)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Dissenting migrants: the undocumented youth struggle over rights and belonging in the United States
Migrantes no dissenso: a luta por direitos e pertencimento da juventude indocumentada nos Estados Unidos
title Dissenting migrants: the undocumented youth struggle over rights and belonging in the United States
spellingShingle Dissenting migrants: the undocumented youth struggle over rights and belonging in the United States
Cardoso, Andréia Fressatti
Belonging
Cidadania
Citizenship
Direito a ter direitos
Juventude indocumentada
Migrantes indocumentados
Pertencimento
Right to have rights
Undocumented migrants
Undocumented youth
title_short Dissenting migrants: the undocumented youth struggle over rights and belonging in the United States
title_full Dissenting migrants: the undocumented youth struggle over rights and belonging in the United States
title_fullStr Dissenting migrants: the undocumented youth struggle over rights and belonging in the United States
title_full_unstemmed Dissenting migrants: the undocumented youth struggle over rights and belonging in the United States
title_sort Dissenting migrants: the undocumented youth struggle over rights and belonging in the United States
author Cardoso, Andréia Fressatti
author_facet Cardoso, Andréia Fressatti
author_role author
dc.contributor.none.fl_str_mv Araujo, Cicero Romao Resende de
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Cardoso, Andréia Fressatti
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Belonging
Cidadania
Citizenship
Direito a ter direitos
Juventude indocumentada
Migrantes indocumentados
Pertencimento
Right to have rights
Undocumented migrants
Undocumented youth
topic Belonging
Cidadania
Citizenship
Direito a ter direitos
Juventude indocumentada
Migrantes indocumentados
Pertencimento
Right to have rights
Undocumented migrants
Undocumented youth
description The aim of this dissertation is to assess the experiments on rights and belonging of the undocumented youth movement in the American public scene. We began questioning if the subject of rights must necessarily be a (national) citizen, framing the issue of the right to have rights and its companion, the right to belong, through the lenses of undocumented migrants. By critically engaging with Arendt\'s perplexities of the rights of man and Rancière\'s politics of human rights, we assess the claim for rights of the undocumented youth in the United States, also known in literature as the 1.5 generation. Since they grew up interacting with state institutions that do not demand papers, such as school, they developed their legal consciousness based on stigma rather than fear, and feel that their belonging to the community had been robbed once they transitioned to adulthood. We follow how the youth were mobilized first around the \"Dreamer\" identity and reclaimed it through more intersectional lenses, proposing two claims in the American public scene: \"undocumented and unafraid\" and \"home is here.\" Whereas the former is interpreted as an assertion of rights subjectivity despite and through their deportable bodies\' vulnerability, the latter is read as a claim for belonging and citizenship in a country that does not recognize such a claim. As we recount the undocumented struggle around the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors Act (DREAM Act) and the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), we propose the framework of citizenship as belonging to analyze the different experiments in rights and belonging that were advanced by these undocumented migrants. We argue that membership and belonging refer to different definitions of citizenship. Membership, which is directly challenged by the claim of undocumented migrants to a \"home,\" is an exclusive, bounded, and bordered category, with close ties to the nation-state and its emplacement tool, nationality. Belonging, on the other hand, is evaluated in three interconnected dimensions: (i) the dialogical construction of the self; (ii) the performative claim of the right to have rights; and (iii) the aesthetic claim of the right to belong. Therefore, by defining themselves as \"undocumented and unafraid,\" and claiming the U.S. as their home, including by enacting law and legal language, the undocumented youth positioned their right to belong and enacted their meanings of citizenship, which are not necessarily linked to papers. This research is positioned in the fields of critical citizenship and migration studies, and follows a grounded theoretical approach. Methodologically, migrant narratives, collected through in depth interviews conducted in the United States between 2021 and 2024, have been centered and presented horizontally to the literature\'s concepts and understandings of the struggle
publishDate 2025
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