- Date
2007-09-26
- Authors
Maria L. Ontiveros
- Abstract
This chapter examines the treatment of immigrant workers through the lens of the Thirteenth Amendment. It examines how the intersection of labor and immigration laws impact immigrant workers in general, guest workers" and undocumented immigrants. It argues that immigrant workers can be seen as a caste of nonwhite workers laboring beneath the floor for free labor in ways which violate the Thirteenth Amendment. Further, it suggests ways in which immigrant workers can use the Thirteenth Amendment to improve their situation and offers an analysis of how the Thirteenth Amendment can form a bridge for organizing between labor, civil rights, immigration rights and human rights groups.
- Number of pages
19
- University
University of San Francisco
- Academic department
School of Law
- Degree
Law
- File Attachments
- Links
- Economic sectors
General relevance - all sectors
- Content types
Policy analysis
- Geographical focuses
United States
- Spheres of activity
History and Law
- Languages
English