The Opportunity Trap, High-Skilled Workers, Indian Families, and the Failures of the Dependent Visa Program, NYU Press, Pallavi Banerjee,Sociology: family, kinship and relationships,Sociology, dependent Visa; state-imposed dependence; Indian skilled workers; gendered migrations; immigrant families; visa regime; racialization; intersectionality; governmentality; “Third-World” women; gender and migration; standpoint dilemmas; Asian migration; out-migration of tech workers and nurses; legal entailments of visa categories; recruitment process; global labor migration; invisibility; devaluation; H-4 dependent visas; disciplining the Self; public discourse; immigrant Skilled-Workers; temporary H-1B Visa; tech Work; nursing; liminal Legality; model Minority; ideal Workers; gendered division of labor; class and domestic work; forced dependence; compensatory Femininities; reassertion of masculinities; transcultural cultivation; parenting while dependent; intensive mothering; middle-class parenting; acts of disruption; immigration policy reforms; resistance; Trumpian futures,, , United States, en-USdependent Visa; state-imposed dependence; Indian skilled workers; gendered migrations; immigrant families; visa regime; racialization; intersectionality; governmentality; “Third-World” women; gender and migration; standpoint dilemmas; Asian migration; out-migration of tech workers and nurses; legal entailments of visa categories; recruitment process; global labor migration; invisibility; devaluation; H-4 dependent visas; disciplining the Self; public discourse; immigrant Skilled-Workers; temporary H-1B Visa; tech Work; nursing; liminal Legality; model Minority; ideal Workers; gendered division of labor; class and domestic work; forced dependence; compensatory Femininities; reassertion of masculinities; transcultural cultivation; parenting while dependent; intensive mothering; middle-class parenting; acts of disruption; immigration policy reforms; resistance; Trumpian futures, [BLURB],[CITY],,books, ebooks, biblet, Book2look