新澳门六合彩内幕信息

Humanizing Deportation

Robert Irwin, a professor at University of California, Davis, has been working on a community-based digital storytelling project, Humanizing Deportation/Humanizando la Deportaci贸n, since 2016., a professor of Spanish, and teams of 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis graduate students, as well as collaborators from several Mexican institutions, have carried out fieldwork all over Mexico and California, facilitating the production of hundreds of personal stories on issues relating to deportation.

Woman paints a mural

The project describes their mission and contains over 300 digital stories of more than 250 different people. These testimonial audiovisual shorts focus on the issues that migrants want to highlight regarding their experiences and their thoughts on the contemporary phenomenon of mass deportation.  The archive also has incorporated stories of migrants in transit through Mexico, such as Central American refugees who risk deportation upon arrival in the U.S. as well as while traveling through Mexico.

portrait montage

The documentary

In 2019, a Strategic Communications video crew from 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis accompanied Irwin and his team on one of their trips to Mexico. They created a documentary on the project, delving further into several migrants鈥 stories and illustrating the continuing effects of heightened border securitization and deportation in both the United States and Mexico.

Migrants talk about their attempts to make a new life in the country they鈥檝e been sent back to, or of their living with the risk of deportation. Some repatriated Mexicans have no memory of their 鈥渉omeland,鈥 and for many Spanish is their second language. While many have found jobs and reorganized their lives, others are living in homeless shelters or on the streets of Tijuana, many miles from their true homes of San Diego, Los Angeles, or other cities. Many feel they live in danger every day.

In total, this project goes beyond mere statistics of the 3 million deported since 2008, instead sharing the personal stories of several hundred of them.

鈥淣either media coverage nor political discourse adequately accounts for the degree of human suffering that deportations have generated,鈥 Irwin said. 鈥淥ur project aims to communicate its human consequences in all their complexity.鈥

Irwin and his team hope that their project will educate, gain political traction, and contribute to policy change.

The project continues.

Humanizing Deportation/Humanizando la deportaci贸n is funded by various grants and institutional sponsorships from both 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis and four Mexican partner institutions.

Just the Beginning

Humanizing Deportation has served as a catalyst for other projects on deportation

Lizbeth de la Cruz Santana, who appears in the documentary, is one of the graduate students who was a member of the fieldwork team that Irwin began working with in Tijuana on Humanizing Deportation/Humanizando la Deportation in 2017. Over the course of her three years collaborating on the project, de la Cruz Santana was inspired to create a mural on the Tijuana side of the U.S.-Mexico border wall. She said she wanted to use public art to investigate what it means to be a childhood arrival who has been deported in an interactive, collaborative border mural.

The finished mural depicts seven different migrants who arrived in the United States as children. are incorporated into the wall, allowing viewers to follow a to information about the people represented in the mural.

Douglas Oviedo, one of the community storytellers in the documentary, is a Honduran migrant of the fall 2018 caravan who has written a book about his experience. Titled Caravaneros, it was published in collaboration with the Humanizing Deportation team a few months ago by Festina Publicaciones. He hopes to raise awareness regarding the profiles and experiences of contemporary migrants, in an era in which they are often portrayed negatively, and suffer significant harm in their interactions with governmental institutions.

UPDATE: Oviedo presented his book to a virtual Zoom audience in November 2020. He told the audience, in Spanish: 鈥淲e know very well that the sacrifice of the American dream is just to work. This is not a dream,鈥 Oviedo reminded the attendees. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not easy to earn a dollar in this country. We have to work for it and sweat for it. We are always prone to discrimination from other people who do not want Latinos. So then this isn鈥檛 a dream. This is a reality that we are living.鈥

The presentation on his book was organized by the Global Migration Center and Humanizing Deportation. It was moderated by and 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis doctoral candidate . Joining them was Cornell University鈥檚 Emerson Hinchliff Chair of Hispanic Studies and Professor of Comparative Literature, , and 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 San Diego Associate Professor of Spanish .

Oviedo, migrant, pastor, and pro-migrant activist, discussed his first-hand experience as a caravanner, the process of a refugee seeking religious asylum in the United States, and how he came to tell this story in the form of a testimonial drama. His new book Caravaneros is available . Watch the recording of the conversation . 

Related Content

An interview with Lizbeth De La Cruz on the.

The writer, Leigh Houck, is a current graduate student in Spanish at 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis. Intern Michelle Villagomez covered the book talk given by Oviedo.

Media contact: Karen Nikos-Rose, News and Media Relations, Office of Strategic Communications, 530-219-5472, kmnikos@ucdavis.edu

Media Resources

Karen Nikos-Rose, News and Media Relations, 530-219-5472, kmnikos@ucdavis.edu

Primary Category

Secondary Categories

Society, Arts & Culture

Tags