Author Archives: klibman

The (trans)formation of illegality as an identity: A study of undocumented Mexican immigrants and their children in New York City by Jocelyn Solis, 2003

Tuesday April 8, 2014, 12:00 – 2:00 The Graduate Center, City University of New York Room 6304.01

Jocelyn Solis Lecture Series on Human Development and Globalization

To Celebrate the Publication
Solis, J., Fernández, J. S., & Alcala, L. (2013). Mexican Immigrant Children‘s Contributions to a community Organization: Exploring Civic Engagement and Citizen Construction.
Sociological Studies of Children & Youth, 16, 177-200.

INTRODUCTION
Colette Daiute
The Graduate Center, City University of New York

FEATURED SPEAKERS
Lucia Alcala
University of California, Santa Cruz
Jesica Siham Fernández
University of California, Santa Cruz

DISCUSSANTS
Barbara Rogoff, University of California, Santa Cruz Joe Glick, The Graduate Center, City University Discussion with Attendees

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On the Event of the Republication of
The (trans)formation of illegality as an identity:
A study of undocumented Mexican immigrants and their children in New York City by Jocelyn Solis, 2003

Contact: cdaiute@gc.cuny.edu; lauren.s.gardner@gmail.com

Extra Credit Opportunity: Free One Day Conference on Immigration

The Immigration Working Group of the City University of New York Graduate Center presents
New Directions in Immigration: Interdisciplinary Research Perspectives
A Graduate Student Conference
Date: Friday, March 28, 2014
Time: 11 am to 5 pm (Lunch provided; Reception to Follow)
Location: City University of New York, Graduate Center  365 Fifth Avenue (Corner of Fifth Ave and 34th St) New York, NY 10016

Room: Concourse 198

11:00 am – 11:15 am                                     Registration

11:15 am – 12:45 pm                                     Session I
Panel 1: Blurring or Redrawing Boundaries?: Race and Ethnicity in the Context of Migration

Brenda Gambol, CUNY Graduate Center – “Blurred or Bright Boundaries? Filipino Americans in Interethnic and Interracial Marriages”

Bernadette Ludwig, CUNY Graduate Center – “Staten Island’s “Iron Ladies.” Gendered Adaptation of Liberian Refugees”

Susie Tanenbaum, CUNY Graduate Center – “Queens Iftar: A Muslim Community Transforming the Public Sphere”

Nazreen Bacchus, Queens College, CUNY – “Managing Assimilation and Multi-Ethnic Gendered Identities: The Case of Second-Generation Indo-Guyanese New Yorkers”

Panel 2: Integration through Education?: Transnational Experiences in Educational Settings

Gowoon Jung, SUNY Albany – “Blurred Citizenship: The Experience of Transnational Korean Students”
Joanna Yip, CUNY Graduate Center – “The Fujianese Immigrant Bargain: An Alternative Narrative of the Model Minority”

Lara-Zuzan Golesorkhi, The New School – “A Space for Integration: Islamic Religious Instruction in                  German Public Schools”
12:45pm-1:45pm                                        Lunch

1:45pm-3:15pm                                           Session II

Panel 3: Citizenship, Law and Governance: How Policy Shapes and is Shaped by the Lives of Migrants

Abigail Kolker, CUNY Graduate Center – “Migrant Worker Vulnerability and Mobilization in Israel: The Role of Local and National Governance”

Stephen Ruszczyk, CUNY Graduate Center – “Dual Marginalization: Governance of Work, Family and Housing of Young Undocumented Mexicans in New York”

Geoffrey Levin, New York University – “The American Struggle for Soviet Jewish Immigration: The Post-Passage Debate over the Jackson-Vanick Amendment, 1976-1989”

Daniel Schneider, CUNY Graduate Center – “Immigration Reform, Enforcement, and a Local Response to Secure Communities”, Co-written by Marlene Ramos, CUNY Graduate Center

Panel 4: Work and the Labor Market: Migrant Incorporation in the Workplace and Their Impact on the Host Economy

Hyein Lee, CUNY Graduate Center – “Ethnic Minorities: Playing the Institutional Game”

Elizabeth Miller, CUNY Graduate Center – “Home is Where the Work is?: Creating a Sense of Home and  Family on the Job”

Jonas Wiedner, CUNY Graduate Center/Humboldt University in Berlin – “Immigrants’ integration in a  changing economy:  Exploring the divergent trends in social status and unemployment of native-born and  immigrant workers in Germany 1980-2010”
Rita Nassar, University of Illinois – “Immigrants as a material threat: a time-series analysis”

3:30 pm – 5:00 pm                             Session III
Panel 5: Transnationalism and Migration: Forging Identities in a Globalized World

Rachel Bogan, CUNY Graduate Center – “Am I Chinese, American, Both, or Neither? The Complexity of Claiming a Transnationally and Transracially Adopted Child’s Identity”

Douglas de Toledo Piza, The New School – “Chinese sellers: a story of globalization as told by an informal market in downtown São Paulo”

Leslie Martino, CUNY Graduate Center – “From ‘La Montaña’ to Manhattan: Mixtecos in the New York City Mexican Mix”

Daniela Pila, SUNY Albany – “‘I’m not good enough for anyone’: Legal Status and the Dating Lives Of Undocumented Young Adults”
5:00pm                                                Reception