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Making Sanctuary Cities

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From its development in the 1980s, the sanctuary city movement—municipal protection of people with uncertain migration status from national immigration enforcement—has been a powerful and controver...
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  • 15 April 2025
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From its development in the 1980s, the sanctuary city movement—municipal protection of people with uncertain migration status from national immigration enforcement—has been a powerful and controversial side of progressive migration policy reform. While some migration activists view sanctuary city policy as the most important aspect of their work, others see it as actively impairing efforts in the fight for migrant rights. In Making Sanctuary Cities, Rachel Humphris provides a new understanding of how citizenship is negotiated and contested in sanctuary cities and what political potentials are opened (and closed) by this designation.

  Through long-term fieldwork across the sanctuary cities of San Francisco, Sheffield, and Toronto—three of the first municipalities to adopt this designation in their respective countries—Humphris investigates the complexity of sanctuary city policy. By capturing the wide-ranging meanings and practices of sanctuary in comparative context, Humphris uncovers how liberal citizenship is undermined by the very thing that makes it worth investing in: the promise of equality. Attending to the tensions inherent in sanctuary policy, this book opens vital questions about the ways governing systems can extinguish political ideals, and how communities choose to live and organize to fight for a better world.

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Price: $25.00
Pages: 190
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Series: Anthropology of Policy
Publication Date: 15 April 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503642393
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"A rich, contextualized analysis, exploring highly contested questions of who belongs and who gets to decide, through the experiences of sanctuary actors in contrasting cities and jurisdictions. Historically grounded, Humphris' ethnographically informed and highly accessible account reveals evolving tensions, contradictions and narratives, bringing to the fore the moral values which drive diverse actors and the governance frameworks which constrain them." —Sarah Spencer, University of Oxford
Rachel Humphris is Senior Lecturer in Sociology and Politics at Queen Mary University of London.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Why Sanctuary?
1. Performing Sanctuary: Making Sanctuary Cities Real
2. Tracing Sanctuary: Histories of Empire and Urban Sovereignty
3. Emplacing Sanctuary: Hierarchies of Authority and Enforcement
4. Negotiating Sanctuary: Emergent Moral Values
5. Brokering Sanctuary: Practices of Knowledge and City Making
Conclusion: A Moral for Urban Governance?
Appendix 1: Methods: Comparative Policy Ethnography
Appendix 2: Table of Inland Border Controls in San Francisco, Sheffield, and Toronto
Notes
Bibliography
Index