INMIGRACIÓN, ANARQUISMO Y DEPORTACIÓN: LA CRIMINALIZACIÓN DE LOS EXTRANJEROS “INDESEABLES” EN TIEMPOS DE LAS“ GRANDES MIGRACIONES”

AUTOR(ES)
FONTE

REMHU, Rev. Interdiscip. Mobil. Hum.

DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO

2015-12

RESUMO

Abstract This article proposes the reconstruction and documenting of certain processes and social events that interrelated immigration, anarchism and deportation within a particular context, namely the “era of the Great Migration.”It devotes special consideration of the previous period of the so called “restrictive turn” of the decade of the 1930s in the field of the governmental policies as developed in the South American region. The article assumes that the mere existence of means of control of migration and mobility such as expulsion or deportation is constituent of the social production and the criminalisation of immigration. The first section traces back the origin and spread of the foreigners’ expulsion as a legal figure in the American continent, particularly focusing on South America, at the beginning of the twentieth century. The next section describes some of the ideas, controversies, and proposals that emerged among officials and jurists as regards of the “expulsion of foreigners” during the first decade of the twentieth century. This description is based on the presentation of the bill as well as the publication of the respective “notes” of Senator Miguel Cané in 1899. Finally, the analysis reconstructs different moments in the life of the anarchist militant Juana Rouco Buela, related to the multiple deportations that she underwent due to her intense political activism. The empirical analysis is based on official and personal documentary sources from the second half of the nineteenth century and the early decades of the twentieth century.

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