“Legalized Inequalities makes a critical contribution to our understanding of how the state, legal system, and current regulatory structures make employment so uncertain for many vulnerable workers. It’s a powerfully written, accessible must-read for anyone interested in immigration, work, and race.”
—Adia Harvey Wingfield, Assistant Vice Provost, professor of sociology, and Mary Tileston Hemenway Professor of Arts and Sciences, Washington University
“Legalized Inequalities is a landmark contribution to the study of law, labor, and migration—an unflinching exposé of how U.S. legal regimes actively construct and sustain racialized precarity in the low-wage workplace. Drawing on over 300 in-depth interviews with immigrant workers and 50 advocates across the New York metropolitan area, Kati L. Griffith, Shannon Gleeson, Darlène Dubuisson, and Patricia Campos-Medina reveal how labor and employment law, immigration policy, and the enduring legacies of slavery and colonialism converge to produce and legitimize workplace precarity. With interdisciplinary rigor and moral clarity, the authors illuminate the state’s central role—not as a passive bystander but as an architect of inequality—while foregrounding the quiet, creative, and sometimes collective ways workers assert dignity and resistance. This book is essential reading for scholars of labor, immigration, race, and social inequality, and for anyone committed to understanding how power operates in the contemporary American political economy.”
—Daniel Galvin, Professor, Department of Political Science, Northwestern University