ACME
Volume 6, Issue 1, 2007, Pages 1-35
La Gran Marcha: Anti-racism and immigrants rights in Southern California (Article)
Loyd J.M. ,
Burridge A.
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a
Department of Geography, Syracuse University, 144 Eggers Hall, Syracuse, NY 13244-1020, United States
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b
Department of Geography, University of Southern California, 416 Kaprielian Hall, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0255, United States
Abstract
Millions of people across the United States took to the streets in spring 2006 to protest repressive immigration legislation, demand just immigration reform, and seek justice in daily life. This article has two aims. First, we seek to intervene in the popular immigration debate, which denies racism and claims to be concerned only with law-and-order. Second, we analyze (im)migration politics in relation to national racial formations. That is, racialized immigration policies do not exist apart from a racially stratified citizenry. We rely on the concept of social death to trace state policies of immigration and criminalization as key sites of interracial and transnational struggles against racism and for justice and liberation. Thus, we seek to elucidate possibilities for anti-racist alliances and social change. We conclude with a discussion of the ways in which we see the immigrants rights movement connecting with other struggles for social justice, and the implications that concepts of national racial formation and social death have for the movement against global apartheid. © Jenna M. Loyd and Andrew Burridge, 2007.
Author Keywords
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-34848845209&partnerID=40&md5=acd9b4515c42bd3e24af6ea384d88539
ISSN: 14929732
Cited by: 22
Original Language: English