Levesque Christopher, DeWaard Jack, Chan Linus, McKenzie Michele Garnett, Tsuchiya Kazumi, Toles Olivia, Lange Amy, Horner Kim, Ryu Eric, Boyle Elizabeth Heger
University of Minnesota.
James H. Binger Center for New Americans at the University of Minnesota Law School.
Law Soc Inq. 2023 May;48(2):407-436. doi: 10.1017/lsi.2022.16. Epub 2022 Jun 30.
Examining what we call "crimmigrating narratives," we show that US immigration court criminalizes non-citizens, cements forms of social control, and dispenses punishment in a non-punitive legal setting. Building on theories of crimmigration and a sociology of narrative, we code, categorize, and describe third-party observations of detained immigration court hearings conducted in Fort Snelling, Minnesota, from July 2018 to June 2019. We identify and investigate structural factors of three key crimmigrating narratives in the courtroom: one based on threats (stories of the non-citizen's criminal history and perceived danger to society), a second involving deservingness (stories of the non-citizen's social ties, hardship, and belonging in the United States), and a third pertaining to their status as "impossible subjects" (stories rendering non-citizens "illegal," categorically excludable, and contradictory to the law). Findings demonstrate that the courts' prioritization of these three narratives disconnects detainees from their own socially organized experience and prevents them from fully engaging in the immigration court process. In closing, we discuss the potential implications of crimmigrating narratives for the US immigration legal system and non-citizen status.
通过审视我们所谓的“犯罪移民叙事”,我们发现美国移民法庭将非公民定罪,强化社会控制形式,并在非惩罚性的法律环境中实施惩罚。基于犯罪移民理论和叙事社会学,我们对2018年7月至2019年6月在明尼苏达州斯内林堡举行的被拘留移民法庭听证会的第三方观察进行编码、分类和描述。我们识别并调查法庭上三种关键犯罪移民叙事的结构因素:一种基于威胁(非公民的犯罪历史以及对社会的潜在危险的故事),第二种涉及应得性(非公民在美国的社会关系、困境和归属感的故事),第三种与他们作为“不可能的主体”的身份有关(将非公民描绘成“非法”、完全可被排除且与法律相悖的故事)。研究结果表明,法庭对这三种叙事的优先考虑使被拘留者与其自身有组织的社会经历脱节,并阻止他们充分参与移民法庭程序。最后,我们讨论犯罪移民叙事对美国移民法律体系和非公民身份的潜在影响。