避难所的悖论:惩罚性例外如何汇聚成对拉美裔的定罪和惩罚

Enrique Alvear Moreno
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摘要

庇护城市将自己定义为拒绝与联邦移民当局共享信息、人员和设施以维持移民治安的大都市。尽管研究表明,庇护城市对移民的犯罪化提出了质疑,但越来越多的文献描述了这些城市庇护所如何在实践中延续等级制度和针对非公民的排斥性政治。然而,这些研究大多将城市庇护所视为旨在挑战联邦权力的地方政策,因此未能充分捕捉到庇护所政策实际上是如何依赖移民犯罪化来治理城市政治问题的。本文利用 1900 页的档案资料和 100 篇报纸文章,以芝加哥为例,研究城市庇护所如何以及为何在扩大移民权利的同时,加强对拉丁裔 "不值得庇护的 "非公民的治安管理,并对其产生惩罚性影响。作为种族化治理的一种形式,我认为芝加哥的庇护政策激活了一系列惩罚性的例外情况,这些例外情况是对不同的政治紧迫性的回应,允许法律和移民执法汇聚在一起,控制拉美裔无证工人、"罪犯 "和 "帮派"。这项研究不仅挑战了庇护城市必然抵制联邦权力的前提,还说明了庇护城市如何加强国家和种族化警察权力的合法性。
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The Paradox of Sanctuary: How Punitive Exceptions Converge to Criminalize and Punish Latinos/as
Sanctuary cities define themselves as metropoles that refuse to share information, personnel, and facilities with federal immigration authorities to police immigrants. While research suggests that sanctuary cities contest the criminalization of migration, a growing literature depicts how these urban sanctuaries could, in practice, perpetuate hierarchies and exclusionary politics against noncitizens. Yet, most of these studies conceive of urban sanctuary as local policies designed to challenge federal power and, thus, fail to fully capture how sanctuary policies could actually rely on the criminalization of migration to govern cities’ political problems. Drawing upon 1,900 pages of archival materials and 100 newspaper articles, this article takes the case of Chicago to study how and why the urban sanctuary expands immigrants’ rights while reinforcing policing with punitive implications for Latino “undeserving” noncitizens. As a form of racialized governance, I argue that Chicago’s sanctuary policies activate a set of punitive exceptions that—in response to distinct political urgencies—allow law and immigration enforcement to converge and control Latino undocumented workers, “criminals,” and “gangs.” This study not only challenges the premise that sanctuary cities necessarily resist federal power but also illustrates how they could strengthen the legitimacy of the state and racialized police power.
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