Extreme inequalities, uneven planning, and unruly environments have long shaped individual and collective subjectivities at Latin America s urban margins. Yet these same margins have frequently given rise to new forms of community organization, cultural practice, and social mobilization. This volumeframes the urban margins as complex and multi-layered sites where ongoing translocal histories of exploitation and marginalization meet distinctly local and interpersonal forms of sociability, subjective belonging, and political agency. Through nuanced ethnographic work and cross-disciplinary theoretical insights, Subjectivity at Latin America s Urban Margins unpacks this complexity, investigating how margins are upheld, negotiated, and challenged.