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Decisions behind terminology, naming, and word use are clearly political gestures. In these pages, I avoid the government-issued term “His-panic” unless an engagement with a particular source prevents me. I prefer the more pan-friendly use of “Latino” to encompass the larger Latin American diaspora living in the United States. As this is a study situated on the West Coast, the term “Latino” connotes Mexican and Central American-origin communities. The use of “Chicana/o” honors the politicized meaning of Mexican Americans and gains made during the Chicano civil rights movement. The adjective “undocumented” refers to immigrants who have yet to secure their legal status in the United States. This book uses Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) when discussing immigration and border enforcement to refer to this agency before its rechristening as Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in 2002. The more colloquial phrase of “la migra” denotes immigration officials, INS/ICE staff, as well as border agents.
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