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Chapter
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Contents
-
Samuel Martinez
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. The Political Economy of International Migration
- 1. The Political Economy of Migration in an Era of Globalization 25
- 2. Ports of Entry in the “Homeland Security” Era: Inequality of Mobility and the Securitization of Transnational Flows 44
-
Part II. Historical Perspectives
- 3. The Treatment of Noncitizens after September 11 in Historical Context 63
- 4. Mexicans of Mass Destruction: National Security and Mexican Immigration in a Pre- and Post-9/11 World 82
- 5. The Demonization of Persons of Arab and Muslim Ancestry in Historical Perspective 98
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Part III. Policing the Borders of the Security State
- 6. Security and Insecurity in a Global “War on Terrorism”: Arab-Muslim Immigrant Experience in Post-9/11 America 117
- 7. Policing the Borders in the Heartland 133
- 8. An Anatomy of Mexican Repatriation: Human Rights and the Borderlands of Complicity 151
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Part IV. Beyond U.S. Borders
- 9. Discourses on Danger and Dreams of Prosperity: Confounding U.S. Government Positions on “Trafficking” from the Former Soviet Union 165
- 10. “We Are Not Terrorists!” Uighurs, Tibetans, and the “Global War on Terror” 184
- 11. The Impact of Plan Colombia on Forced Displacement 199
- 12. Challenging U.S. Silence: International NGOs and the Iraqi Refugee Crisis 216
- Conclusion 237
- Afterword: Migration, Human Rights, and Development 253
- Notes 271
- References 293
- Contributors 329
- Index 333
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. The Political Economy of International Migration
- 1. The Political Economy of Migration in an Era of Globalization 25
- 2. Ports of Entry in the “Homeland Security” Era: Inequality of Mobility and the Securitization of Transnational Flows 44
-
Part II. Historical Perspectives
- 3. The Treatment of Noncitizens after September 11 in Historical Context 63
- 4. Mexicans of Mass Destruction: National Security and Mexican Immigration in a Pre- and Post-9/11 World 82
- 5. The Demonization of Persons of Arab and Muslim Ancestry in Historical Perspective 98
-
Part III. Policing the Borders of the Security State
- 6. Security and Insecurity in a Global “War on Terrorism”: Arab-Muslim Immigrant Experience in Post-9/11 America 117
- 7. Policing the Borders in the Heartland 133
- 8. An Anatomy of Mexican Repatriation: Human Rights and the Borderlands of Complicity 151
-
Part IV. Beyond U.S. Borders
- 9. Discourses on Danger and Dreams of Prosperity: Confounding U.S. Government Positions on “Trafficking” from the Former Soviet Union 165
- 10. “We Are Not Terrorists!” Uighurs, Tibetans, and the “Global War on Terror” 184
- 11. The Impact of Plan Colombia on Forced Displacement 199
- 12. Challenging U.S. Silence: International NGOs and the Iraqi Refugee Crisis 216
- Conclusion 237
- Afterword: Migration, Human Rights, and Development 253
- Notes 271
- References 293
- Contributors 329
- Index 333