"An important contribution to understanding processes of migrant political incorporation into the racialized state. The book will be especially useful for scholars and students of migration studies, social movements, race and ethnicity, postcolonial and decolonization studies, and the sociology of states, public policies, and citizenship."— Contemporary Sociology
"Xiong's research findings and analysis offer a much fuller understanding of the dynamic interactive process of immigrant political incorporation. . . . This book is timely and important as the United States continues to experience the migration of millions of refugees and immigrants who have been displaced by war, climate crisis, extreme poverty, and violence."— Contemporary Sociology
"Immigrant Agency provides new insights about the Hmong American experience and puts race at the center of its analysis to understand the complex ways in which the state constrains political incorporation and how refugees themselves have engaged in political action to shape public policy. Xiong's well-crafted and informative book changes the way in which we understand refugee populations and their political incorporation in the U.S."
— Dina Okamoto, author of Redefining Race: Asian American Panethnicity and Shifting Ethnic Boundaries
"In attending to the racial dimensions of immigrant incorporation—racialized both in terms of overt prejudice and discrimination as well as subtler, cultural forms of marginalization as well as assumptions about whiteness and privilege—Xiong and his sociological counterparts move well beyond the ethnic-assimilationist assumptions that dominated American social thought for so many years."— Ethnic and Racial Studies