Description
Book SynopsisTrade Review“Brazil’s high rate of granting asylum to Syrians and Congolese superficially suggests that a racial democracy is protecting refugees. Jensen’s ethnographic deep dive shows that underneath the surface of simple statistics and public pronouncements, the asylum process is saturated with racial inequalities.”
-- David Scott FitzGerald, coauthor of The Refugee System: A Sociological Approach
“The Color of Asylum follows Syrian and Congolese escapees from their countries’ wars to incisively describe how Brazil’s asylum system differentially treats the two groups. This is the latest chapter in Brazil’s long, fascinating, and racialized immigration history.”
-- Edward Telles, University of California, Irvine
“Grounded on an impressive array of archival data, legal materials, and the keenest of ethnographies, The Color of Asylum renders accessible the complexities of the asylum bureaucracy and is a critical contribution and a must-read.”
-- Cecilia Menjívar, University of California, Los Angeles
“With clarity and ethnographic rigor, The Color of Asylum documents how Brazil’s seemingly open asylum policy follows the historical racial project of the nation-state. I highly recommend this book to readers interested in race matters in Latin America as well as to race scholars in general.”
-- Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Duke University
"
The Color of Asylum provokes important questions about racialized political violence and the ways in which seemingly inclusive regimes and policies can continue to produce racial domination. This book would greatly benefit those studying, among other topics, the racialization of migrants, the social and political construction of the refugee condition, the state’s role in processes of migrant in/exclusion, the intersection of racial subordination and legal status, and the numerous ways that racism shapes migrant sociopolitical belonging. It would also be a strong entry point for those looking to teach or learn about race and migration beyond Europe or the United States." * Sociology of Race and Ethnicity *
Table of ContentsIntroduction
1: Arrival: Asylum in Context
2: Waiting: Racial Conditioning and the Body
3: Seeing: Making Racial Sense of Claims
4: Knowing: White Logic and (Dis)Embodiment
5: Deciding: Speeding Up, Slowing Down
6: Caring: Racial Logics of Concern and Vulnerability
7: After: Refugee Apathy
Conclusion – Racial Domination through Inclusion
Acknowledgments
Appendix A: On Data and Methods
Appendix B: Figures and Tables
Notes
References
Index