We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Everyday Activists
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
-
22 April 2025

Strategies of resistance by undocumented young adults
About 825,000 of the more than two million undocumented young adults in the United States benefited from the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program started by President Obama in 2012. Through DACA, these young adults are able to work legally in the United States and have been insulated from deportation. However, since President Trump’s attempted termination of the program in 2017, DACA recipients have endured a rollercoaster of legal battles that have left them in an unimaginable state of prolonged limbo.
Amid this rapidly shifting political climate, many undocumented young adults have joined the large-scale, high-visibility social movement to fight for policy change and immigrant justice. Yet often overlooked are the thousands more DACA recipients nationwide who have never participated in immigration-related activism. As Christina M. Getrich argues, in less publicly visible ways, they are nonetheless fighting for immigrant well-being and justice in their everyday adult lives, and their more private forms of action should be considered political activism. Drawing from five years of rich ethnographic research with a diverse population of thirty DACA recipients living in the Washington, D.C., area, Everyday Activists portrays the alternative political engagement strategies they enact in their daily lives as they leverage their unique knowledge bases and skill sets and make a meaningful impact in their communities. The volume reveals how these young activists’ strategies are instructive for thinking creatively about how to show up in our everyday lives for immigrants and others who are systematically subjected to social exclusion.
— Sarah Horton, author of They Leave Their Kidneys in the Fields Illness, Injury, and Illegality among U.S. Farmworkers
"Shines needed light on the quiet and seemingly mundane, yet transformative, political engagement of the thousands of DACA recipients who may not identify as DREAMers. It reveals the myriad everyday ways to respond to the bureaucratic violence of today’s immigration regime and the many possibilities to pursue justice. Trailblazing, eminently accessible, and thoroughly engaging, Everyday Activists makes a significant scholarly contribution and a strong case for permanent immigration statuses. It should be read widely!"
— Cecilia Menjívar, Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Dorothy L. Meier Chair in Social Equities, UCLA
"Everyday Activists stands out for the depth of its research and the originality of its case study, with the focus on the DC metropolitan area being a case in point. The book’s micro-level focus and careful attention to participants’ lived experiences effectively challenge simplified and stereotypical portrayals of undocumented immigrants and their struggles in the United States."