The Humanizing Deportation Archive: History, Methods, Preliminary Observations

Thursday, 15 November 2018 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM PST

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Thursday, 15 November 2018 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM PST

Abstract:

Humanizing Deportation is a digital storytelling project that offers a platform for people to recount their personal experiences and communicate key messages regarding deportation. Our production team's method begins from the premise that those with the greatest expertise on the human consequences of deportation are those with direct experiences of involuntary repatriation. Our online bilingual community archive, housed at UC Davis, consists of a Mexico focused collection of testimonial video shorts, and, with 50 digital stories produced in 2017 (in our pilot site of Tijuana) and an anticipated 100 more by the end of 2018 (from a half dozen Mexican cities), constitutes the world's largest qualitative archive regarding this issue. Its applications in research, pedagogy, community activism, public policy

and

law are numerous. 

Today's presentation outlines our collaborative research method, summarizes the experiences of our multi-institutional fieldwork and production team, and highlights some of the key issues raised by our community storytellers, including those concerning childhood arrivals, family separation, cultural citizenship, and the general violence inflicted through the US's current regime of mass involuntary displacement and Mexico's lack of infrastructure for responding to what amounts to one of the most far-reaching human rights crises of our times in North America. 

UC Davis Global Migration Center

https://globalmigration.ucdavis.edu

Migrationcluster.ucdavis.edu

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