FiguresTablesContributorsSeries editor’s prefacePART I Migrant workers, global racial capitalism and unfreedom1. Introduction to Race, Gender and Contemporary International Labor Migration Regimes2. The narrative of ethno-racial labor competition and employee choicePART II The return of the Bracero Program? H-visa holders in the United States3. Bringing back the Bracero Program: the migration industry in the recruitment of H-2 visa workers4. Delegating discrimination in the temporary worker visa programs5. Tech coolies: Indian scientists and engineers entering the United States on H-1B visasPART III Legal and organizing strategies for U.S. immigrant and migrant workers6. Workers with temporary protected status: the value and limits of delinking immigration and employ7. Garment worker organizing in Los Angeles8. Emerging forms of organization for precarious migrant workersPART IV Domestic workers and the politics of representation9. Domestic workers and storytelling advocacy: competing visions of migrant worker organizing10. Aesthetics of precarity: racial performativity in the archive of migrant domestic workPART V The complexities of global processes for workers11. Sustaining inequality: the incorporation of migrant remittances in the Philippine political econIndex