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E-raamat: Protect, Serve, and Deport: The Rise of Policing as Immigration Enforcement

  • Formaat: 212 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Jun-2017
  • Kirjastus: University of California Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780520968868
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  • Formaat: 212 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Jun-2017
  • Kirjastus: University of California Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780520968868
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"Protect, Serve, and Deport exposes the on-the-ground workings of local immigration enforcement in Nashville, Tennessee. Between 2007 and 2012, Nashville's local jail participated in an immigration enforcement program called 287(g), which turned jail employees into immigration officers who identified over ten thousand removable immigrants for deportation. The vast majority of those identified for removal were not serious criminals, but Latino residents arrested by local police for minor violations. Protect, Serve, and Deport explains how local politics, state laws, institutional policies, and police practices work together to deliver removable immigrants into an expanding federal deportation system, conveying powerful messages about race, citizenship, and belonging."--Provided by publisher.

At publication date, a free ebook version of this title will be available through Luminos, the UC Press open access publishing program. Visit www.luminosoa.org to learn more.

Protect, Serve, and Deport exposes the on-the-ground workings of local immigration enforcement in Nashville, Tennessee. Between 2007 and 2012, Nashville’s local jail participated in an immigration enforcement program called 287(g), which turned jail employees into immigration officers who identified over ten thousand removable immigrants for deportation. The vast majority of those identified for removal were not serious criminals, but Latino residents arrested by local police for minor violations. Protect, Serve, and Deport explains how local politics, state laws, institutional policies, and police practices work together to deliver immigrants into an expanding federal deportation system, conveying powerful messages about race, citizenship, and belonging.

 

Arvustused

"This stellar volume cements Armentas status as an expert ethnographer working at the intersection of the sociology of critical criminology, law and society, and immigration. Academics and non-academics, graduate and under-graduate students alike will find in this text a readable and eminently troubling portrait of immigrant life in the deportation nation, a story deftly told through the clear-eyed and empathetic vision of one of the fields rising stars." * Theoretical Criminology * "Should be required reading for anyone interested in understanding what happens when local police facilitate mass deportation." * Law & Society Review * "Amada Armentas Protect, Serve, and Deport makes a notable contribution to this burgeoning scholarship by tracing the adoption, rollout, and consequences of the 287(g) program in Davidson County, Tennessee . . . [ it] is particularly timely and highly relevant to scholars researching immigrant criminalization, policing, or color-blind racism." * American Journal of Sociology * "Armenta provides us with a rich ethnography of immigration policing in Nashville that is so insightful that it will also be of interest to scholars working on immigration enforcement, bordering practices, racial profiling, discretion, and policing in many other settings. It is truly a stellar book that should become mandatory reading on any syllabus or comprehensive exam list in border criminology and critical police studies in the United States and beyond." * Border Criminologies *

List of Illustrations
vii
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(14)
1 Who Polices Immigration?
15(21)
2 Setting Up the Local Deportation Regime
36(20)
3 Being Proactive: On the Streets in Southeast Nashville
56(32)
4 Seeing and Not Seeing Immigration: Immigrant Outreach in an Era of Proactive Policing
88(22)
5 Inside the Jail: Processing Immigrants for Removal
110(19)
6 Punishing Illegality
129(22)
Conclusion 151(8)
Appendix: Fieldwork FAQs 159(6)
Notes 165(12)
References 177(14)
Index 191
Amada Armenta is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Pennsylvania.