Description
Book SynopsisThis book chronicles the struggles of undocumented migrant women in France as they fight to become rights-bearing citizens, revealing how concepts of citizenship and nationality intersect with gender, sexuality, and immigration.
Trade Review"Raissiguier makes a passionate and rigorous contribution to the contemporary debate on how traditionally universalist France treats and defines subjects who do not fall neatly within Republican categories. This is a compelling and timely study about who has the right or power to symbolize Frenchness. Raissiguier provides us with a careful and detailed history of grassroots movements, working at the intersection between ethnic, gender, and queer issues, and showing exactly how a Western democracy is forced to reevaluate its core values as it seeks to respond to significant changes in its social fabric." -- Mireille Rosello * University of Amsterdam *
"What a smart, engaging book. By taking seriously the experiences, ideas and strategies of African women in France, Catherine Raissiguier makes visible the women activists inside the vibrant
sans-papiers immigrant rights movement. She shows us why social movements cannot be understood without a feminist curiosity. In the process, she reveals the gendered racialized fissures in contemporary French political culture." -- Cynthia Enloe * author of
The Curious Feminist *
"[T]his book makes an important contribution to work on gender, migration, race, and nation in France and Europe. . . . It should be widely read by all those who are interested in French and European immigration policies as well as by those who want a better understanding of how discrimination works in the law and politics in the global North today." -- Susan Terrio *
Journal of Women, Politics & Policy *
"This book provides an insightful and much needed analysis of the
sans papières—the women of the
sans papiers movement. Raissiguier persuasively argues for the exclusionary nature of French republicanism by exposing the links between the struggles of the
sans papières and those for
parité and
Pactes Civils de Solidarité; in the process, she shows how racism, homophobia, and sexism work together to create outsiders within." -- Miriam Ticktin * The New School *
"[
Reinventing the Republic makes] an important contribution to the study of the struggle for rights by migrant movements in Europe . . . Catherine Raissiguier takes a novel approach to the French debate by substituting the central concept of personhood for the normative considerations defined by elite national politics." -- Catherine Lloyd *
SIGNS *
"By adopting a feminist approach to her analysis, Raissiguier highlights the often overlooked role and contributions of the sans-papières in the movement, as well as the hurdles, such as gender bias, that they had to overcome. This rigourous study brings to the fore the precarious situations that many sans-papières face in France." -- Leslie Kealhopper *
French Studies *