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Days after taking the White House, Donald Trump signed three
executive orders-these authorized the Muslim Ban, the border wall,
and ICE raids. These orders would define his administration's
approach toward noncitizens. An essential primer on how we got
here, Bans, Walls, Raids, Sanctuary shows that such barriers to
immigration are embedded in the very foundation of the United
States. A. Naomi Paik reveals that the forty-fifth president's
xenophobic, racist, ableist, patriarchal ascendancy is no
aberration, but the consequence of two centuries of U.S. political,
economic, and social culture. She deftly demonstrates that attacks
against migrants are tightly bound to assaults against women,
people of color, workers, ill and disabled people, and queer and
gender nonconforming people. Against this history of barriers and
assaults, Bans, Walls, Raids, Sanctuary mounts a rallying cry for a
broad-based, abolitionist sanctuary movement for all.
In "Radical Histories of Sanctuary," contributors explore both
contemporary and historical invocations of "sanctuary," paying
particular attention to its genealogies in social movements against
state violence. Expanding the scope of sanctuary, they address not
only immigrant activism but also topics such as indigenous
strategies of survival in the Americas, gay liberation in rural
spaces, and urban housing for refugees. The essays contest liberal
conventions of sanctuary that shore up the very forms of power and
subjugation they seek to dismantle: from immigrant movements
affirming the distinction between "good" and "bad" immigrants to
gay liberation movements for police reform that fail to address the
fundamental violence of policing. Examining both the liberatory
potential of sanctuary and its limits, the contributors argue for
intersectional strategies of resistance that connect the struggles
of disparate groups against repressive and violent power.
Contributors. Rachel Ida Buff, Caleb Duarte, Treva Ellison, Jason
Ezell, Carla Hung, Kyle B. T. Lambelet, Sunaina Maira, Rachel
McIntire, A. Naomi Paik, Jason Ruiz, Rebecca M. Schreiber, Aimee
Villarreal, Elliot Young
Days after taking the White House, Donald Trump signed three
executive orders-these authorized the Muslim Ban, the border wall,
and ICE raids. These orders would define his administration's
approach toward noncitizens. An essential primer on how we got
here, Bans, Walls, Raids, Sanctuary shows that such barriers to
immigration are embedded in the very foundation of the United
States. A. Naomi Paik reveals that the forty-fifth president's
xenophobic, racist, ableist, patriarchal ascendancy is no
aberration, but the consequence of two centuries of U.S. political,
economic, and social culture. She deftly demonstrates that attacks
against migrants are tightly bound to assaults against women,
people of color, workers, ill and disabled people, and queer and
gender nonconforming people. Against this history of barriers and
assaults, Bans, Walls, Raids, Sanctuary mounts a rallying cry for a
broad-based, abolitionist sanctuary movement for all.
In this bold book, A. Naomi Paik grapples with the history of U.S.
prison camps that have confined people outside the boundaries of
legal and civil rights. Removed from the social and political
communities that would guarantee fundamental legal protections,
these detainees are effectively rightless, stripped of the right
even to have rights. Rightless people thus expose an essential
paradox: while the United States purports to champion inalienable
rights at home and internationally, it has built its global power
in part by creating a regime of imprisonment that places certain
populations perceived as threats beyond rights. The United States'
status as the guardian of rights coincides with, indeed depends on,
its creation of rightlessness. Yet rightless people are not silent.
Drawing from an expansive testimonial archive of legal proceedings,
truth commission records, poetry, and experimental video, Paik
shows how rightless people use their imprisonment to protest U.S.
state violence. She examines demands for redress by Japanese
Americans interned during World War II, testimonies of HIV-positive
Haitian refugees detained at Guantanamo in the early 1990s, and
appeals by Guantanamo's enemy combatants from the War on Terror. In
doing so, she reveals a powerful ongoing contest over the nature
and meaning of the law, over civil liberties and global human
rights, and over the power of the state in people's lives.
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