Shapeshifting Displacement: Notions of Membership and Deservingness Forged by Illegalized Residents

S. Coutin, Jennifer M. Chacón, Stephen Lee, Sameer M. Ashar, Jason Palmer
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract:This paper considers how accounts produced by illegalized residents in the United States shapeshift US immigration enforcement regimes by defining narrators and their communities as “belonging.” Anthropologist Aimee Cox develops the notion of “shapeshifting” to refer to how groups that are deemed “social problems” redefine the institutions within which they are embedded. The illegalized residents interviewed for this paper redefined US immigration law and policy as arbitrary, racially biased, and exploitative, even as they argued that they deserved status in the United States. Such critiques and definitions of deservingness perform a politics of displacement, redrawing boundaries of belonging.
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变形的位移:非法居民塑造的成员观念和应得性
摘要:本文研究了美国非法居民的叙述如何通过将叙述者及其社区定义为“归属”来改变美国移民执法制度。人类学家Aimee Cox提出了“变形”的概念,指的是那些被认为是“社会问题”的群体如何重新定义他们所处的机构。接受本文采访的非法移民将美国的移民法和政策重新定义为武断、有种族偏见和剥削性的,尽管他们认为自己应该在美国获得地位。这种对应得性的批评和定义表现出一种置换政治,重新划定归属的界限。
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