REI Colloquium: Precarious Protections: Unaccompanied Minors Seeking Asylum in the United States

October 10, 2023 12:00pm - 1:30pm

More children than ever are crossing international borders alone to seek asylum worldwide. In the past decade, over a half million children have fled from Central America to the United States, seeking safety and a chance to continue lives halted by violence. Yet upon their arrival, they fail to find the protection that our laws promise, based on the broadly shared belief that children should be safeguarded. A meticulously researched ethnography, Precarious Protections chronicles the experiences and perspectives of Central American unaccompanied minors and their immigration attorneys as they pursue applications for refugee status in the US asylum process.

Dr. Chiara Galli is an Assistant Professor at the University of Chicago in the Comparative Human Development Department.

Dr. Galli also a Faculty Scholar with the American Bar Foundation's (ABF) Access to Justice Scholars Program for 2023-2024. She received my Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of California Los Angeles in 2020 and was a postdoctoral fellow at Cornell from 2020 to 2022.

Her research is situated in the fields of international migration, refugee studies, law & society, gender, children & youth, the life course, and families. She studies the legal and political struggles that lie at the heart of classifying migration flows, how immigration laws shape people's lives, and how children differ from adults as migratory actors and legal subjects. Dr. Galli's research has been generously funded by several agencies, including the National Science Foundation, and has been published in the journals Social Problems, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, and Ethnic and Racial Studies, as well as in book chapters and policy reports.

She is the author of the book, Precarious Protections: Unaccompanied Minors Seeking Asylum in the United States (University of California Press. 2023), an ethnographic study that chronicles the experiences and perspectives of Central American unaccompanied minors and their immigration attorneys as they pursue applications for refugee status in the US asylum process.

Her current research includes two major studies. First, with the support of the ABF and in collaboration with Tatiana Padilla (Cornell), they are studying access to legal representation and determinants of case outcomes for unaccompanied minors in the U.S. immigration court using a large administrative dataset. Second, with a team of research assistants, I am conducting an ethnographic study on the reception of asylum-seekers in Chicago.

Before pursuing an academic career, she worked for non-profits and was a researcher for the Italian National Contact Point of the European Migration Network.

Tuesday, October 10, 2023

12:00pm to 1:30pm

109 Philosophy Hall, Berkeley, CA, 94720

Registration Link: 

Event Contact: ezrabristow@berkeley.edu