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Unruly Immigrants - Rights, Activism, and Transnational South Asian Politics in the United States (Paperback)
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Unruly Immigrants - Rights, Activism, and Transnational South Asian Politics in the United States (Paperback)
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In Unruly Immigrants, Monisha Das Gupta explores the innovative
strategies that South Asian feminist, queer, and labor
organizations in the United States have developed to assert claims
to rights for immigrants without the privileges or security of
citizenship. Since the 1980s many South Asian immigrants have found
the India-centered "model minority" politics of previous
generations inadequate to the task of redressing problems such as
violence against women, homophobia, racism, and poverty. Thus they
have devised new models of immigrant advocacy, seeking rights that
are mobile rather than rooted in national membership, and advancing
their claims as migrants rather than as citizens-to-be. Creating
social justice organizations, they have inventively constructed a
transnational complex of rights by drawing on local, national, and
international laws to seek entitlements for their
constituencies.Das Gupta offers an ethnography of seven South Asian
organizations in the northeastern United States, looking at their
development and politics as well as the conflicts that have emerged
within the groups over questions of sexual, class, and political
identities. She examines the ways that women's organizations have
defined and responded to questions of domestic violence as they
relate to women's immigration status; she describes the
construction of a transnational South Asian queer identity and
culture by people often marginalized by both mainstream South Asian
and queer communities in the United States; and she draws attention
to the efforts of labor groups who have sought economic justice for
taxi drivers and domestic workers by confronting local policies
that exploit cheap immigrant labor. Responding to the shortcomings
of the state, their communities, and the larger social movements of
which they are a part, these groups challenge the assumption that
citizenship is the necessary basis of rights claims.
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