Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
University of Arizona Home
Home
Profiles
Departments and Centers
Scholarly Works
Activities
Grants
Datasets
Prizes
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
Agency and resilience along the Arizona-Sonora border: How unauthorized migrants become aware of and resist contemporary U.S. nativist mobilization
Daniel E. Martínez
, Matthew H. Ward
Sociology
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
5
Scopus citations
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Agency and resilience along the Arizona-Sonora border: How unauthorized migrants become aware of and resist contemporary U.S. nativist mobilization'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
Arizona
100%
Sonora
100%
Resilience
100%
Nativists
100%
Unauthorized Migrants
100%
Minutemen
100%
Migrants
75%
Political Implications
50%
Survey Data
25%
Social Movements
25%
Deterrence
25%
US-Mexico Border
25%
Indigenous Languages
25%
1-factor
25%
Border Crossing
25%
Privileged Group
25%
Household Income
25%
Potential Threats
25%
U.S Citizens
25%
Coyote
25%
Selection Model
25%
Migrant Group
25%
Anti-immigrant
25%
Household Status
25%
Specific Human Capital
25%
Heckman Probit Model
25%
Social Sciences
Mexico
100%
Survey Analysis
100%
Human Resources
100%
US Citizen
100%
Household Income
100%
Psychology
Resiliency
100%
Immigrant
100%
Model Selection
100%
Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Immigrant
100%
Human Capital
100%