Kids in Cages

Surviving and Resisting Child Migrant Detention

Emily Ruehs-Navarro (Editor), Lina Caswell Muñoz (Editor), Sarah Diaz (Editor)
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In recent years, the plight of immigrant children has been in the national spotlight. A primary issue of concern is the experience of child migrants in detention by the U.S. government.

The authors in this volume approach the topic of child migrant detention from a range of perspectives. Some authors, particularly those who provide a legal perspective, chronicle the harms of detention, arguing that despite governmental assurances of child protection, detention is fundamentally a state-sanctioned form of violence. The social scientists in the volume have worked closely with detained youth themselves; in these chapters, authors highlight the ways in which youth survive detention, often through everyday acts of resistance and through the formation of temporary relationships. Practitioners including psychologists, activists, and faith leaders look at forms of resistance to detention. From retheorizing psychological interventions for detained youth to forming hospitality homes that act as alternatives to detention, these practitioners highlight ways forward for advocates of youth. At the heart of these narratives lies a crucial debate: the tension between harm-reduction strategies and abolition.

This interdisciplinary work brings together voices from the legal realm, the academic world, and the on-the-ground experiences of activists and practitioners.

Contributors
Stella Akello
Jessica Alaniz
Aireen Grace Andal
Samuel Arroyo
Corey Brost
Lina Caswell Muñoz
Marisa Chumil
Patricia Crowley
Iman Dadras
Sarah J. Diaz
Sandra Espinoza
Jacqueline Florian
Michael Gosch
Darlene Gramigna
Lisa Jacobs
Katherine Kaufka Walts
Corinne Kentor
Jenn M. Lilly
Kathlyn Mulcahy
Jennifer Nagda
Vida Opoku
Silvia Rodriguez Vega
Emily Ruehs-Navarro
Herlin Soto-Matute
Luis Edward Tenorio
Jajah Wu

***
Contents
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction 3
Emily Ruehs-Navarro and Lina Caswell Muñoz

Cages: Contextualizing the Violence of Child Migrant Detention
1. “Not ‘Our’ Children”: The Othering of Migrant Children and Youth and the Concomitant Use of State-Sanctioned Violence Through Immigration Law and Policy 31
Sarah J. Diaz, Katherine Kaufka Walts, and Lisa Jacobs
2. Kids, Paperwork, and Cages: An Analysis of the Unseen Representations of Immigrant Minors in the Key Documents and Legal Resources of the Unaccompanied Children Program 59
Aireen Grace Andal
3. Centering Children’s Experiences: Lessons for Advocates 87
Marisa Chumil and Jennifer Nagda

Survival: Voices of Resilience
4. “She Took Care of Me, and I Don’t Even Remember Her Name”: Relational Ruptures in Detention Settings 117
Corinne Kentor
5. “I’m Not an Animal. I’m a Girl.”: Recognizing Resistance in Latinx Migrant Youths’ Testimonios of Being Detained by Customs and Border Protection 143
Jenn M. Lilly
6. Detained Homemaking: The Liminal Homemaking of Sexual and Gender Minority Central American Unaccompanied Youth 173
Luis Edward Tenorio
7. Emerging into Darkness: Coming of Age in the American Immigration Detention System 189
Jajah Wu and Vida Opoku

Resistance: A People’s Response
8. Reimagining Treatment for Children Caged at the Border: From Therapy to Liberation 221
Sandra Espinoza, Iman Dadras, Jacqueline Florian, and Herlin Soto-Matute
9. Alternatives to Detention: A Faith-Based Response 245
Reverend Dr. Samuel Arroyo
Part 1. Watching Unaccompanied Minors Flourish: Hospitality as an Alternative to Detention 255
Father Corey Brost and Brother Michael Gosch
Part 2. What About the Women? 270
Sister Patricia Crowley, Sister Kathlyn
Mulcahy, Darlene Gramigna, Sister Stella Akello, Jessica Alaniz, and Emily Ruehs-Navarro
10. A Practitioner’s Case Study of Immigrant Children’s Artistic Narratives of Resistance 283
Silvia Rodriguez Vega

Conclusion. Toward a Decarceral Future: Reflections on the Practicability of Abolishing Migrant Child Detention 307
Sarah J. Diaz
Contributors 325
Index 335

Kids in Cages explores the physical, legal, and political mechanisms that the U.S. government wields to encage young migrants, as well as the strategies that youth develop in community with each other, family members, and advocates to fight their constraints. This volume offers important insights for scholars, students, practitioners, and all readers interested in one of the most pressing social justice issues of our time.”—Ruth Gomberg-Muñoz, author of Becoming Legal: Immigration Law and Mixed-Status Families

Kids in Cages
364 Pages 6 x 9 x 0
Published: November 2024Paperback ISBN: 9780816553808
Published: November 2024Hardcover ISBN: 9780816553815
Published: November 2024Ebook ISBN: 9780816553822

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