Abstract:The chapter provides a critical reflection on how the author, Leisy J. Abrego, conceptualizes, conducts, analyzes, writes up, and presents her research projects. As a "mestiza from a working-class bac...The chapter provides a critical reflection on how the author, Leisy J. Abrego, conceptualizes, conducts, analyzes, writes up, and presents her research projects. As a "mestiza from a working-class background," the author does not have the luxury of deciding to distance from or "intellectualize" oppression. However, she sees colleagues who come from majority groups do this with relative ease. The author is a sociologist who studies how legal violence is perpetrated against migrants and its effects on their legal consciousness. The result is pathbreaking and interdisciplinary scholarship that is "simultaneously humanizing and rigorous," and that fosters community through an "accompaniment" with immigrants rather than a study of immigrants.Read More