Description acceptable. A sociologist described how “early exiters” who undertook this process understand a “master status” through “integration, discovery, and learning.” A UCLA sociologist examined “gray area” outcomes of this process through liminality and a form of “non-existence” developed by Susan Coutin. In an “embodied anthropology” of this subject, one scholar lamented being associated with doctors who “don’t know anything.” In the book Lives in Limbo, (*) Roberto Gonzalez examined the impact of the Plyler decision on people who performed this action. Seth Holmes wrote about being caught performing this action in the book Fresh Fruit, Broken Bodies. Douglas Massey argued that this process became less cyclical due to NAFTA. Rubén Rumbaut coined the term “1.5 generation” for people who do this action as children. For 10 points, people who do what action as children are protected by the DACA policy? ■END■
ANSWER: immigration to the United States [or seeking asylum in the United States or equivalents; accept seeking jobs in the United States or equivalents; accept answers mentioning crossing the United States–Mexico border; prompt on immigration or partial answers by asking “to where?”] (The UCLA sociologist is Cecilia Menjívar. Coutin developed “legal non-existence.”)
<AR, Social Science>
= Average correct buzz position