Toggle Menu

Monuments to Migration and Labor

In the face of escalating ICE raids, how can we honor and give voice to immigrant laborers?

Ánh Adams and Andy Urban

August 19, 2025

ICE and other federal agents take a delivery driver into custody at Union Station on August 16, 2025 in Washington, DC. Donald Trump announced plans to deploy federal officers and the National Guard to the District in order to place the DC Metropolitan Police Department under federal control.(Andrew Leyden / Getty Images)

Bluesky

In the days after US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers raided the Alba Wine & Spirits Warehouse in Edison, New Jersey, on July 8, 2025, media coverage of the event has rightfully emphasized the fear, trauma, and injustice that immigrant communities and advocates have felt in its wake. One response to ICE raids, in New Jersey and across the country, has been to argue for the hardworking nature of immigrants and the value they contribute to the American economy.

These lines of reasoning are appealing, since they offer sober rebuttals to the fictional nonsense about immigrant crime and violence that the Trump administration manipulates to justify raids. At the same, however, this framing can add to the dehumanizing characterization of immigrants as only useful when they are economic subjects willing to take on low-paying and undesirable jobs—and not because they are human beings deserving of dignity. When it comes to warehouses and immigrant labor in New Jersey, there is a more complicated backstory that speaks to both the nuances of how the American economy is organized in the 21st century, and to the activism and agency that immigrants have demonstrated as workers—stories that deserve to be told.

The raid in Edison, which ICE referred to as a “worksite compliance inspection”—euphemistic language inaccurately suggesting employers were the target of enforcement—resulted in the arrest of 20 individuals. ICE brought immigrants to Delaney Hall, the infamous Newark immigration detention facility that the Department of Homeland Security contracted the GEO Group to reopen this year. Delaney Hall was in the news back in May for playing host to federal agents’ arrest of Newark Mayor Ras Baraka. Scenes like the one in Edison will occur even more frequently now that the Big Beautiful Bill Trump signed in early July provides the DHS with $170.7 billion in funding, and includes incentives such as $50,000 signing bonuses to bolster ICE’s ranks.

Why is it that ICE so frequently raids warehouses? Warehouses are a ubiquitous part of the New Jersey landscape, distribution points in a consumer economy where nearly everything can be purchased online with the click of a button. A 2024 report from the Environmental Defense Fund counted 3,034 warehouses in New Jersey, serviced by 380,000 daily truck trips. Nearly a third of New Jersey’s population lives within half a mile of a warehouse, most of them Black and Latine residents who face higher rates of asthma due to vehicle congestion.

Current Issue

View our current issue

Subscribe today and Save up to $129.

Many warehouse workers are recruited by temp agencies, who, as brokers, contract unauthorized as well as documented immigrant workers for placement. Under-the-table contracts to employ unauthorized workers often result in precarious and exploitative employment.

In New Jersey and elsewhere, advocates have challenged the invisibility and exploitation of migrant workers by centering the voices of immigrants themselves and building long-term relationships with immigrant communities. In 2023, for instance, New Labor fought for the Temporary Worker Bill of Rights, which protects against wage theft and illegal fees that agencies charge, and mandates that temporary workers receive equal pay and benefits for performing “substantially similar work under similar working conditions,” regardless of employment status.

This summer, the New Jersey Monuments to Migration and Labor project hosted dialogues across the state, creating safe environments where immigrant workers were invited to share their stories. As attendees at these dialogues, we saw participants emphasize the pride they have in their labor and speak of the families they support and the communities they build. From these narratives, the project plans to create public monument installations that illustrate the complexity and nuance of immigrant lives and make visible the contributions of immigrants as both workers and humans.

Stakeholders in this project, such as the National Domestic Workers Alliance, who were leaders in advocating for the 2024 New Jersey Domestic Workers’ Bill of Rights, have reminded us to recenter conversations around immigration to focus on migrants themselves. Illuminating the stories and victories of activists is essential to combating policies that dehumanize immigrants. Amid escalating attacks from the federal government and ICE, it is more important than ever to return to not-so-distant achievements in immigration worker advocacy, and to build commemorative spaces where the public can gather to both honor the past and to organize for the future.

Ánh AdamsÁnh Adams is a PhD student in American history at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, and an intern for the New Jersey Monuments to Migration and Labor project, pursuing research on the history of gendered youth incarceration in the 20th-century American Midwest.


Andy UrbanAndy Urban is an associate professor of American studies and history at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, and director of the Monuments to Migration and Labor: The New Jersey Im/migrant Laborers’ Monument Project, which is funded through the Mellon Foundation Monuments Project initiative.


Latest from the nation