"Making Migrants is a clear and compelling ethnography of migration governance in postcolonial Tajikistan. Drawing on a decade of research with migration management bureaucracy, Malika Bahovadinova demonstrates how local officials simultaneously resist and reproduce the figures of 'the migrant' and 'the illegal' as they seek to assert sovereignty under conditions of constraint. The book reveals the troubling convergence of migration advocacy and discriminatory enforcement, demonstrating how, together, they generate illegalityeven when unintentionalas Tajik officials grapple with Russia's criminalization of mobility. By centering Central Asia and its entanglements with Russia, Making Migrants makes a vital contribution to postcolonial and migration scholarship, illuminating enduring dependencies, powerful imaginaries of past and future, and the everyday bureaucratic practices through which migration takes place. Essential reading for scholars and students of migration, the book exemplifies the power of ethnography to render complexity visible.", Lauren Woodard, Syracuse University