A Common Humanity
224 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:01 Oct 2011
ISBN:9780816529650
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A Common Humanity

Ritual, Religion, and Immigrant Advocacy in Tucson, Arizona

The University of Arizona Press
As debate about immigration policy rages from small towns to state capitals, from coffee shops to Congress, would-be immigrants are dying in the desert along the US–Mexico border. Beginning in the 1990s, the US government effectively sealed off the most common border crossing routes. This had the unintended effect of forcing desperate people to seek new paths across open desert. At least 4,000 of them died between 1995 and 2009. While some Americans thought the dead had gotten what they deserved, other Americans organized humanitarian aid groups. A Common Humanity examines some of the most active aid organizations in Tucson, Arizona, which has become a hotbed of advocacy on behalf of undocumented immigrants.

This is the first book to examine immigrant aid groups from the inside. Author Lane Van Ham spent more than three years observing the groups and many hours in discussions and interviews. He is particularly interested in how immigrant advocates both uphold the legitimacy of the United States and maintain a broader view of its social responsibilities. By advocating for immigrants regardless of their documentation status, he suggests, advocates navigate the conflicting pulls of their own nation-state citizenship and broader obligations to their neighbors in a globalizing world. And although the advocacy organizations are not overtly religious, Van Ham finds that they do employ religious symbolism as part of their public rhetoric, arguing that immigrants are entitled to humane treatment based on universal human values.

Beautifully written and immensely engaging, A Common Humanity adds a valuable human dimension to the immigration debate.
Lane Van Ham is an English instructor at Metropolitan Community College–Penn Valley, in Kansas City, Missouri. For many years he has taught adult education classes that have included immigrant students.
Acknowledgments
1 Migrant Deaths and Immigrant Advocacy in Southern Arizona
2 Political Imagination in the United States
3 US-Mexico Border Enforcement and the Emergence of Immigrant Advocacy in Tucson
4 Immigrant Advocacy in Tucson Responds to the Gatekeeper Complex
5 Individual Worldviews: Humanity, Nationality, and Ultimacy
6 Collective Expression: Dramatizing the Crisis
7 The El Tiradito Vigil
8 Memorial Marches
9 Ritual Transformation and Cosmopolitics in Tucson Immigrant Advocacy
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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