Deporting Black Britons provides an ethnographic account of deportation from the UK to Jamaica. It traces the painful stories of four men who were deported after receiving criminal convictions in the UK. For each of the men, all of whom had moved to the UK as children, deportation was lived as exile – from parents, partners, children and friends – and the book offers portraits of survival and hardship in both the UK and Jamaica. Based on over four years of research, Deporting Black Britons describes the human consequences of deportation, while situating deportation stories within the broader context of policy, ideology, law and violence. It examines the relationship between racism, criminalisation and immigration control in contemporary Britain, suggesting new ways of thinking about race, borders and citizenship in these anti-immigrant times. Ultimately, the book argues that these stories of exile and banishment should orient us in the struggle against violent immigration controls, in the UK and elsewhere.
Author(s): Luke de Noronha
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Year: 2020
Language: English
Tags: Deportation; Multi-status Britain; Migration; Borders; Racism; Citizenship; Jamaica; Ethnography
Front matter
Contents
Pictures
Maps, tables and graphs
Introduction
Jason
Ricardo
Chris
Denico
Family and friends: witnessing deportation and hierarchies of (non-)citizenship
Post-deportation: citizenship and the racist world order
Deportation as foreign policy: meanings of development and the ordering of (im)mobility
Conclusion
Afterword, by Chris
Acknowledgements
Notes
Index