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Centering the Immigrant in
the Inter/National Imagination
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Robert S. Chang & Keith Aoki
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| In this Article, Professors Chang and Aoki
examine the relationship between the immigrant
and the nation in the complicated racial terrain
known as the United States. Special attention is
paid to the border which contains and configures
the local, the national and the international.
They criticize the contradictory impulse that has
led to borders becoming increasingly porous to
the flows of information, goods and capital while
simultaneously constricting when it comes to the
movement of certain persons, particularly those
of Asian and Latina/o ancestry. The authors
examine Monterey Park, California, as one site
where there has been a large influx of capital,
information, and persons. Centering the immigrant
in their analysis allows them to observe the
interaction of national borders and the
construction of racial subjects as community
members negotiate electoral politics and
coalition building. |
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Copyright
© 1997 by California Law Review, Inc.
California Law Review, Inc. (CLR) is a California
nonprofit corporation.
CLR and the authors are solely responsible for
the content of their publications.
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