Run for the Border – Vice and Virtue in U.S.–Mexico Border Crossings: Citizenship and Migration in the Americas
Autor Steven W. Benderen Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 mai 2012
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780814789520
ISBN-10: 0814789528
Pagini: 233
Dimensiuni: 158 x 235 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: MI – New York University
Seria Citizenship and Migration in the Americas
ISBN-10: 0814789528
Pagini: 233
Dimensiuni: 158 x 235 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: MI – New York University
Seria Citizenship and Migration in the Americas
Recenzii
"A look at the movement of goods and people in both directions across our border to the south, as well as a framework for a policy "that honors the shared economic and cultural legacy." Bender is a professor at Seattle University School of Law and the author of several books." The Seattle Times, June 2012
"No doubt, borders are incredibly fascinating. And if you want a pleasant way to understand the multitude of factors driving the enormous legal and illicit traffic across the US-Mexico border, then Run for the Border is the book for you. Benders detailed and nuanced review of the US-Mexican border, its history and its complexity, is invaluable. It presents a very readable collection of historic to very modern examples demonstrating why people move goods and themselves in both directions. Benders rich analysis gives us the tools to understand what is wrong--and occasionally right--with our trade, immigration and drug policies. In reviewing immigration reform and drug legalization Steve Bender makes some sober and some surprising policy suggestions. Run for the Border takes common US border mythology and smashes it to pieces. What is left after reading this very interesting and compelling book is a much richer understanding of the US-Mexico border. It uses history and modern cultural references to show what the border is and does. We also learn how and why people, legally and otherwise, have crossed goods and themselves over it for the past 150 years. Bender reveals the complexity of border traffic and shows us, strand by strand, how it works. Along the way, he also exposes the unfortunate fog of myths, stereotypes, and rank racism that have obscured our understanding of the border and the people who cross it. Run for the Borders fact-based approach gets us well beyond the din of the intense and sometimes bitter debate over immigration and drug policies." Raymond C. Caballero, former mayor of El Paso, TX
"Benders account offers an important corrective to the idea that there is any single narrative that ought to drive the complex debate on immigration policy. With a series of graphic illustrations Bender explodes many of the myths about immigration and tells the complicated interlocking series of stories that have colored our understanding of the relationship this country has had with Mexico and which Mexico has had with us. It is an important and valuable contribution to the increasingly vituperative political debate on how to manage the border."Gerald Torres, author of The Miner's Canary: Enlisting Race, Resisting Power, Transforming Democracy
"A look at the movement of goods and people - in both directions - across our border to the south, as well as a framework for a policy "that honors the shared economic and cultural legacy." Bender is a professor at Seattle University School of Law and the author of several books." The Seattle Times, June 2012 "No doubt, borders are incredibly fascinating. And if you want a pleasant way to understand the multitude of factors driving the enormous legal and illicit traffic across the US-Mexico border, then Run for the Border is the book for you. Bender's detailed and nuanced review of the US-Mexican border, its history and its complexity, is invaluable. It presents a very readable collection of historic to very modern examples demonstrating why people move goods and themselves in both directions. Bender's rich analysis gives us the tools to understand what is wrong--and occasionally right--with our trade, immigration and drug policies. In reviewing immigration reform and drug legalization Steve Bender makes some sober and some surprising policy suggestions. Run for the Border takes common US border mythology and smashes it to pieces. What is left after reading this very interesting and compelling book is a much richer understanding of the US-Mexico border. It uses history and modern cultural references to show what the border is and does. We also learn how and why people, legally and otherwise, have crossed goods and themselves over it for the past 150 years. Bender reveals the complexity of border traffic and shows us, strand by strand, how it works. Along the way, he also exposes the unfortunate fog of myths, stereotypes, and rank racism that have obscured our understanding of the border and the people who cross it. Run for the Border's fact-based approach gets us well beyond the din of the intense and sometimes bitter debate over immigration and drug policies." Raymond C. Caballero, former mayor of El Paso, TX "Bender's account offers an important corrective to the idea that there is any single narrative that ought to drive the complex debate on immigration policy. With a series of graphic illustrations Bender explodes many of the myths about immigration and tells the complicated interlocking series of stories that have colored our understanding of the relationship this country has had with Mexico and which Mexico has had with us. It is an important and valuable contribution to the increasingly vituperative political debate on how to manage the border."Gerald Torres, author of The Miner's Canary: Enlisting Race, Resisting Power, Transforming Democracy
"No doubt, borders are incredibly fascinating. And if you want a pleasant way to understand the multitude of factors driving the enormous legal and illicit traffic across the US-Mexico border, then Run for the Border is the book for you. Benders detailed and nuanced review of the US-Mexican border, its history and its complexity, is invaluable. It presents a very readable collection of historic to very modern examples demonstrating why people move goods and themselves in both directions. Benders rich analysis gives us the tools to understand what is wrong--and occasionally right--with our trade, immigration and drug policies. In reviewing immigration reform and drug legalization Steve Bender makes some sober and some surprising policy suggestions. Run for the Border takes common US border mythology and smashes it to pieces. What is left after reading this very interesting and compelling book is a much richer understanding of the US-Mexico border. It uses history and modern cultural references to show what the border is and does. We also learn how and why people, legally and otherwise, have crossed goods and themselves over it for the past 150 years. Bender reveals the complexity of border traffic and shows us, strand by strand, how it works. Along the way, he also exposes the unfortunate fog of myths, stereotypes, and rank racism that have obscured our understanding of the border and the people who cross it. Run for the Borders fact-based approach gets us well beyond the din of the intense and sometimes bitter debate over immigration and drug policies." Raymond C. Caballero, former mayor of El Paso, TX
"Benders account offers an important corrective to the idea that there is any single narrative that ought to drive the complex debate on immigration policy. With a series of graphic illustrations Bender explodes many of the myths about immigration and tells the complicated interlocking series of stories that have colored our understanding of the relationship this country has had with Mexico and which Mexico has had with us. It is an important and valuable contribution to the increasingly vituperative political debate on how to manage the border."Gerald Torres, author of The Miner's Canary: Enlisting Race, Resisting Power, Transforming Democracy
"A look at the movement of goods and people - in both directions - across our border to the south, as well as a framework for a policy "that honors the shared economic and cultural legacy." Bender is a professor at Seattle University School of Law and the author of several books." The Seattle Times, June 2012 "No doubt, borders are incredibly fascinating. And if you want a pleasant way to understand the multitude of factors driving the enormous legal and illicit traffic across the US-Mexico border, then Run for the Border is the book for you. Bender's detailed and nuanced review of the US-Mexican border, its history and its complexity, is invaluable. It presents a very readable collection of historic to very modern examples demonstrating why people move goods and themselves in both directions. Bender's rich analysis gives us the tools to understand what is wrong--and occasionally right--with our trade, immigration and drug policies. In reviewing immigration reform and drug legalization Steve Bender makes some sober and some surprising policy suggestions. Run for the Border takes common US border mythology and smashes it to pieces. What is left after reading this very interesting and compelling book is a much richer understanding of the US-Mexico border. It uses history and modern cultural references to show what the border is and does. We also learn how and why people, legally and otherwise, have crossed goods and themselves over it for the past 150 years. Bender reveals the complexity of border traffic and shows us, strand by strand, how it works. Along the way, he also exposes the unfortunate fog of myths, stereotypes, and rank racism that have obscured our understanding of the border and the people who cross it. Run for the Border's fact-based approach gets us well beyond the din of the intense and sometimes bitter debate over immigration and drug policies." Raymond C. Caballero, former mayor of El Paso, TX "Bender's account offers an important corrective to the idea that there is any single narrative that ought to drive the complex debate on immigration policy. With a series of graphic illustrations Bender explodes many of the myths about immigration and tells the complicated interlocking series of stories that have colored our understanding of the relationship this country has had with Mexico and which Mexico has had with us. It is an important and valuable contribution to the increasingly vituperative political debate on how to manage the border."Gerald Torres, author of The Miner's Canary: Enlisting Race, Resisting Power, Transforming Democracy
Notă biografică
Descriere
A realistic account of the porous US-Mexico border from both sides