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Citizens vs' Citizenry

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Political. Social. Rights ... are new 'political subjects' for whom the political world must now ... The rights involve health coverage and voting eligibility ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Citizens vs' Citizenry


1
Citizens vs. Citizenry
  • Undocumented immigrants and Latino Cultural
    Citizenship
  • By William V. Flores

http//arch.ced.berkeley.edu/kap/1997_images/Backg
round/History/barrio.jpg
2
  • Rights, Citizenship, and Membership
  • Cultural Citizenship Claiming Space and Rights
  • Claiming Community, Claiming Rights
  • Cultural Rights and Civil Society

3
Overview
  • being a citizen guarantees neither full
    membership in society nor equal rights. To be a
    full citizen one must be welcome and accepted as
    a full member of the society.
  • Pg 255

4
Rights, Citizenship, and Membership
  • Race
  • Language
  • Culture
  • These three things are used as an impermeable
    wall, blocking Latinos from becoming full
    citizens.

5
Examples
  • Paul Gilroy says that even in the UK being
    English and being black are categories that are
    mutually impermeable (pg 256)
  • Stuart Hall says that racism constructs
    impassable symbolic boundaries andconstantly
    marks and attempts to fix and naturalize the
    difference between belongingness and Otherness.
    (pg 256)
  • Flores was Mexican even though he was born
    in the United States, had never been to any part
    of Mexico other than Baja, and spoke very little
    Spanish. (pg 257)

6
Rights, Citizenship, and Membership
  • Doubling is the idea of hybridity of the
    peoples, such as Latino Americans
  • Idea introduced by Homi Bhabha
  • The hyphen between Mexican and American
    becomes a spaceIt is a border that both
    seperates and links two worls and Latinosare
    both trapped and liberated (pg 257)

7
Rights
  • Citizenship is defined by 3 categories of rights
  • Civic
  • Political
  • Social

8
Rights
  • By becoming citizens and gaining membership,
    these people are creating new rights and changing
    society
  • Latinos have followed in the footsteps of African
    Americans for rights to desegregate schools and
    voting rights
  • They have also created new rights in language
    battles throughout the South and Southwest of the
    U.S.
  • They are new political subjects for whom the
    political world must now take notice of
  • They challenge existing power, as well
  • Also they are entering into the world of social
    movements

9
Membership
  • Kenneth Karst says that miorities achieve
    membership in U.S. society not by assimilation,
    but through the struggle to claim rights as
    citizens
  • Patricia Williams adds that for African Americans
    the litmus test of being full citizens is
    obtaining the same rights enjoyed by white
    Americans.
  • (pg 257)

10
Undocumented Chicanos
  • Both fellow Chicanos and Americans are fight
    for and against the rights of undocumented
    Chicanos
  • The rights involve health coverage and voting
    eligibility
  • In New York, Latinos argued whether the
    undocumented should have the right to determine
    how the money was spent for education
  • Rights of undocumented is linked to rights of all
  • Ex. repatriation in 1931 when 400,000 Mexicans
    were deported, some of these deported were U.S.
    born citizens of Mexican decent

11
Cultural Citizenship Claiming Space and Rights
  • Developing a belonging to the society is
    important for a belief of active citizenship
  • Cultural Citizenship is a broad range of
    activities of everyday life through which Latinos
    and other groups claim space in society, define
    their communities, and claim rights. It involves
    the rights to retain difference, while also
    attaining membership in society. It also
    involves self-definition, affirmation, and
    empowerment.
  • Remember the 3 categories of rights

12
Cultural Citizenship
  • The Latino view of America is different than
    any view of a white American
  • The claiming of space is key to feeling a
    belonging because they have their own areas to do
    Latino cultural activities
  • Barrios have become these areas, until they have
    been destroyed
  • Communities aid in the membership into the U.S.
    society
  • Cultural spaces are claimed as property to keep
    their home culture alive such as cultural
    churches

13
Cultural Citizenship
  • These spaces are not just places and
    geographic locales but also include
    opportunities for creative expression,
    self-representation, and engagement (pg 263)
  • CC for Latinos involves the creation of a
    distinct Latino sensibility, a social and
    political discourse, and a Latino aesthetic, all
    of which flow out a unique reality of being
    Latino in the U.S. and the desire to express
    uniqueness. (pg 263-4)

14
Claiming Community, Claiming Rights
  • Barrios, such as Little Michoacan, have come
    together and formed ways of living and surviving
    off of the bare minimum and below the poverty
    line
  • The Social capital that is used and shared within
    these barrios is used to expand their economic
    capabilities and social capabilities within the
    U.S.
  • The undocumented are protected by the documented
    Mexicans
  • These social networks and barrios help the groups
    of Latinos create communities

15
Claiming Space and Rights
  • INS raids have rallied Latinos together to
    protect the undocumented
  • These various cases illustrate cultural
    citizenship through the claiming of space the
    development of a distinct Chicano perspective to
    unify Chicanos and Mexicanos and the emergence
    of Mexican undocumented and legally resident
    immigrants as political subjects, new citizens
    demanding new rights. (pg 265)

16
La Clinica, Cultural Spaces and New Rights
  • An example of CC and the claiming of
    spaces,rights is when in 1973 a small clinic in a
    barrio received a grant
  • Because of the grant, the commission which
    granted it, wanted an agency to determine the
    number of legal and illegal aliens there were in
    the serviced community
  • La Clinica and the local church became the
    meeting point for meetings to discuss how to stop
    these agencies because they wanted to protect the
    undocumented
  • La Clinica and the church are examples of
    Cultural Citizens claiming cultural spaces
  • The fight that these people put together is an
    example of a fight for new rights
  • The slogan of this argument became Health Care
    is a Right, Not a Privilege

17
La Clinica
  • The people of the barrio created the clinic and
    believe that their labor and work granted them
    the right to use the clinic whether documented or
    not
  • The space they created is a cultural space
    claimed by the Latinos through their work and
    their labor

18
Cultural Citizenship
  • Cultural Citizenship is a collective identity
  • An injury to one is an injury to all. (pg 267)
  • To them we were all simply Mexicans --maybe
    behind our backs they even called us wetbacks.
    We felt we had to protect them the
    undocumented. Thats what being a Chicano is
    all about, protecting your own, protective your
    community. And they the undocumented are part
    of our community. They are out hermanos y
    hermanas brothers and sister. (pg 267-8)

19
Cultural Citizenship
  • Again at La Clinica cultural citizenship is
    expressed through the creation of immunization of
    the undocumenteds children
  • The children must have proof of immunization to
    register for school, but the undocumented were
    afraid of being detected
  • The Committee for the Rights of Undocumented
    Children was created to protect these children
  • The committee took care of dejados (children left
    behind when their parents were picked up at work
    or on their way home)
  • parents and children transformed fear of
    deportation and dejo (abandonment) into networks
    of support. (pg 269)

20
Operation Jobs
  • Operation Jobs is a program put in place to
    arrest undocumented workers in May 1982
  • In response to Ronald Reagans Operation Jobs
    documented Chicanos rallied together to form Raza
    Si
  • This group was put together to reject this
    Operation and protect the undocumented
  • The community bound together to protect the
    undocumented and mocked them with slogans and
    buttons that said Illegal Alien to mock the INS
  • Green Cards were produced by the community to
    show that they belonged within the barrio

21
Cultural Rights and Civil Society
  • The need to link cultural practices to social
    struggles is needed for social change
  • to feel as as though they belong and are
    welcome in this society, Latinos must have a
    social space for expressing their interests and
    creativity cultural citizenship. (pg 275)
  • The issue within the civil society with cultural
    citizenship is that when people seek cultural
    citizenship it usually is anti-hegemonic

22
Claiming Rights
  • Latinos are creating their own social spaces
  • Latino communities are rejecting the artificial
    boundaries established by the state to
    distinguish between citizen and non-citizen
  • By their actions to include both undocumented and
    legal residents in their social movements,
    Latinos create social space for immigrants to
    emerge as subjects joining with U.S.-born Latinos
    to fight for common interests
  • Through these movements new citizens and new
    social ators are emerging, redefining rights,
    entitlements, and what it means to be a member of
    the society
  • Counter-narratives are emerging that offer
    alternative visions of U.S. society

23
ConclusionNation and Culture
  • Above all things, no matter who attacks these
    cultures and nations, they are all bound by a
    common history, language, and culture
  • The nation of Latinos within the U.S. create
    social spaces and fight for new rights as a
    nation, not individually
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