Publication by DPDF 2007 “Rethinking Europe: Religion, Ethnicity, Nation” Fellow Avraham Astor.

 

This paper integrates Agamben’s concept of “bare life” with the Copenhagen School’s concept of “securitization” to develop a framework for analyzing the elevation of immigration out of the realm of ordinary politics and into the realm of security during the 1950s. I argue that immigrants’ extreme invisibility in daily life and visibility in security-obsessed media venues made them an easy outlet for fears about subversive activity. The success with which state and civil society actors deployed securitizing rhetoric constituted a key precondition for the implementation of Operation Wetback. This paper emphasizes the role of unions and Hispanic civic organizations in legitimating this rhetoric. In the concluding section, current developments brought about by the “War on Terror” are compared with those that took place during the years preceding Operation Wetback.

Publication Details

Title
Unauthorized Immigration, Securitization, and the Making of Operation Wetback
Authors
Astor, Avraham
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Publish Date
April 2009
Citation
Astor, Avraham, Unauthorized Immigration, Securitization, and the Making of Operation Wetback (Palgrave Macmillan, April 2009).
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