BARRIOZONA
Bilingual Community Expression
Published by the Hispanic Institute of Social Issues
The Complex Tapestry of the Undocumented
Day Laborers Are Just One Strand
By Gabriel Escobar
Pew Hispanic Center
They are on Long Island, in the suburbs of Maryland and Virginia, in Atlanta and in Southern California. You can find
them in the parking lots outside Home Depot in Florida and in
Phoenix. Wherever they are, they will likely have four
things in common. They are Latino. They are men. They are looking for work. And they are all "day laborers."

In communities grappling with this ad-hoc labor force, the term "day laborer" has become shorthand for illegal
immigrant. But as ubiquitous as they are in the public debate over immigration, day laborers are only a fraction of a
growing and diverse population of unauthorized migrants.

Who are the unauthorized, and how many are there? They number between 11.5 and 12 million, according to the
latest
Pew Hispanic Center estimate. More than three quarters (78%) migrated here from Mexico or some other
Latin American country.

But beyond this prototypically Hispanic origin, the other demographic traits commonly associated with the image of
the day laborer are not good descriptors of the full undocumented population.

For starters, men make up only about half (49%) of the unauthorized population, with women (35%) and children
(16%) comprising the rest. In addition, most unauthorized immigrants are not single. More than half of this
population is made up of men and women who live in families with spouses and/or children.

And once the children come into the picture, the family portrait of unauthorized immigrants grows more complex.
According to Pew estimates, some 1.8 million children of unauthorized immigrants were born abroad and thus, like
at least one parent, are here without legal status. But an even greater number, 3.1 million, were born in this
country and thus under U.S. law are citizens by birth (even though their parents may not be).

If one adds this population of 3.1 million U.S. citizen children into the mix, the total number of people who live in
families in which either the head of the family or a spouse is unauthorized grows to 14.6 million.

Many of these families are "mixed" -- that is, they include some members who are here without legal authorization
and others who are U.S. citizens by birth. According to the Center's analysis, there are 1.5 million unauthorized
families in which all the children were born in the United States and are thereby legal residents. Another 460,000
families have a mix of children -- some of whom are legal residents and others who are unauthorized. And this
family portrait also includes 3.9 million adult women, more than half of whom work.

Finally, to return to the employment profile of unauthorized immigrants, here, too, the "day laborer" stereotype
creates a distorted impression. There are an estimated 7.2 million unauthorized workers in the labor force, but just
a fraction -- typically the most recently arrived -- are day laborers.

The vast majority of those 7.2 million unauthorized immigrant workers hold jobs -- on farms, on construction sites,
in food processing plants and textile mills, in the leisure and hospitality industries, in landscaping and janitorial
services and elsewhere. Many are unskilled, but many others are upholsterers, industrial sewing machine
operators, roofers, meat packers and the like.

Indeed, some 5% of all the jobs in the U.S. civilian in labor force are held by unauthorized immigrants, according to
a Center estimate based on data from the March 2005 Current Population Survey.

So when one considers the totality of the unauthorized population -- the mothers, the children, the U.S. citizens
who are linked by blood to those who are not, the skilled and unskilled workers who hold one of every 20 jobs in
this country -- the day laborer is just one strand in a complex tapestry.


1 This report uses the term "unauthorized migrant" to mean a person who resides in the U.S. but is not a U.S. citizen, has not
been admitted for permanent residence, and is not in a set of specific authorized temporary statuses permitting longer-term
residence and work. Some migrants in this group have legal authorization to live and work in the U.S. on a temporary basis,
including those with temporary protected status (TPS) and some migrants with unresolved asylum claims. Together they may
account for as much as 10% of the estimate.
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