Aviva Chomsky is professor of history and coordinator of Latin American Studies at Salem State University. The author of several books, Chomsky has been active in Latin American solidarity and immigrants' rights issues for over twenty-five years. She lives in Salem, Massachusetts.
"An impassioned and well-reported case for change.... Chomsky ably
lays out just how brutal life can be for the undocumented."
--New York Times Sunday Book Review "Undocumented adds
smart, new, and provocative scholarship to the immigration
debate."
--Los Angeles Review of Books "From the first page to the
last, Undocumented is to immigrant rights movement what
We Charge Genocide was to the African American movement--a
dossier that sets aside quibbles about whether immigrants
contribute to the US economy or not, whether immigrants speak
English or not and gives flesh to the slogan, 'Immigrant rights are
human rights.' A clear-headed and smart book that locates the
struggles of immigrants squarely in the struggles for human rights.
Nothing less is to be accommodated, and much more is to be
imagined."
--Vijay Prashad, author of The Poorer Nations: A Possible
History of the Global South "Professional in her scholarship,
Chomsky has written a book that will be relevant to those who do
not share her position as well as to those who do."
--Publishers Weekly "Dares to call the [immigration] problem
'manufactured, ' one that could be solved with the stroke of a
pen."
--Ms. Magazine
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