The 1996 U.S. Immigration Reform and Responsibility Act has led
to the forcible deportation of more than thirty thousand Dominicans
from the United States, with little protest or even notice from the
public. Since these deportees return to the country of their
origin, many Americans assume repatriation will be easy and the
emotional and financial hardships will be few, but in fact the
opposite is true. Deportees suffer greatly when they are torn from
their American families and social networks, and they are further
demeaned as they resettle former homelands, blamed for crime waves,
cultural and economic decline, and other troubles largely beyond
their control.
Following thousands of Dominican deportees over a seven-year
period, David C. Brotherton and Luis Barrios capture the experience
of emigration, imprisonment, banishment, and repatriation on this
vulnerable population. Through a unique combination of sociological
and criminological reasoning, they isolate the forces that motivate
immigrants to leave their homeland and then commit crimes that
violate the very terms of their stay. Housed in urban landscapes
rife with gangs, drugs, and tenuous working conditions, these
individuals, the authors find, repeatedly play out a tragic
scenario, influenced by long-standing historical injustices,
punitive politics, and increasingly conservative attitudes
undermining basic human rights and freedoms. Brotherton and Barrios
conclude that a simultaneous process of cultural inclusion and
socioeconomic exclusion best explains the trajectory of emigration,
settlement, and rejection, and they mark in the behavior of
deportees the contradictory effects of dependency and colonialism:
the seductive draw of capitalism typified by the American dream
versus the material needs of immigrant life; the interests of an
elite security state versus the desires of immigrant workers and
families to succeed; and the ambitions of the Latino community
versus the political realities of those designing crime and
immigration laws, which always disadvantage these poor and
vulnerable populations. Filled with riveting life stories and
uncommon ethnographic research, Banished to the Homeland relates
the modern deportee's journey to broader theoretical studies of
transnationalism, assimilation, and social control, exposing the
dangerous new reality created by today's draconian immigration
policies.
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