"Migration and Mortality’s thematically tight focus offers a well-organized book that is hard to put down.... Because of the denaturalizing work it does, this book would serve as an excellent teaching tool... The book’s thoughtful structure organically lends itself to a course.... Migration and Mortality offers readers different ways to reflect on the relationship between past and present forms of racial capitalism."-Contemporary Sociology "Like the rest of the collection, the epilogue connects individual stories to broader themes in history, theory, and politics. The editors and contributors of this book make a strong case for a multidisciplinary approach to assess the health impacts of migration."-Journal of American Ethnic History “This poignant collection of essays clearly and boldly drives home the critical point that borders and migration policies lead to premature death and suffering, and, by doing so, carry on the long tradition of a country founded on settler colonialism, genocide, and enslavement. Using a broad range of voices from students to established scholars, the editors and contributors collectively detail the myriad ways U.S. migration policies constitute the worst of the intertwined systems of racism and capitalism. This powerful edited volume would be a great addition to classes on migration, human rights, globalization, social inequality, and race. Migration and Mortality should be required reading for anyone wishing to understand the role of border and migration policies in late capitalism.”-Tanya Golash-Boza, Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Merced, and author of Deported: Immigrant Policing, Disposable Labor, and Global Capitalism “Migration and Mortality is a timely, thorough, and compelling volume. Its focus on ‘social death’ to capture a variety of experiences-some of which amount to suffering that translates into ‘slow death,’ while others encompass death more literally-is creative, novel, and needed. This book is a significant contribution to migration studies.”-Cecilia MenjÍvar, Dorothy L. Meier Chair in Social Equities and Professor of Sociology at UCLA, and coauthor of Immigrant Families "This expansive and interdisciplinary volume brings together a range of perspectives on the necropolitics of US immigration enforcement. Drawing from empirical sites as diverse as a border security industry conference in Texas, heat illness among farmworkers in Florida, and immigrant detention in New Jersey county jails, the chapters represent the cruel complexity and life-and-death consequences of the political economy of immigration in the 21st century.... [T]his volume...stands as a compendium of the mortality-producing politics of 21st-century immigration enforcement."-Bulletin of Latin American Studies