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9 Geo. J. L. & Mod. Critical Race Persp. 99 (2017)
The Crossroads: Being Black, Immigrant, and Undocumented in the Era of #BlackLivesMatter

handle is hein.journals/gjmodco9 and id is 103 raw text is: 



       The   Crossroads: Being Black, Immigrant, and
     Undocumented in the Era of #BlackLivesMatter


                             BREANNEJ.   PALMER*

                                INTRODUCTION
   This paper discusses the detrimental, intersectional effects of immigration law and
criminal law on Black immigrants,  both with and without  documentation.  Anti-
Black racism, deeply embedded   in America's criminal law system, funnels Black
immigrants  into the criminal justice system, and subsequently into removal or other
punitive immigration  proceedings. Black immigrants have  long been missing, or
purposely erased, from the national immigration narrative. Only a handful of organi-
zations advocate for their particularized needs. As Black immigrant activism increases
in visibility, opportunities for a new form of coalition building-known as transfor-
mational solidarity-must  be adopted in order to protect and advocate for Black
immigrants.
   Part One presents the increasing presence of Black immigrants in the U.S., and
discusses the ways in which  racialized policing and application of criminal laws
subject Black immigrants to some  of the same perils Black Americans face when
confronted by the criminal justice system. Yet, for Black immigrants, this confronta-
tion can lead to removal or other dire immigration consequences. Part One lays out
statistics about Black immigrants, including their higher rates of detention and
removal as compared  to other immigrant groups. Part Two proposes that the Black
immigrant  population's invisibility, and resulting vulnerability, requires targeted
activism from both immigration  reform and migrant rights advocates and criminal
justice reform advocates. Part Two also highlights two such organizations advocating
for Black immigrants: the Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI) and  the
UndocuBlack   Network   (UndocuBlack)  and  shows how  their work  engages in
transformational solidarity. Part Three proposes a forward-looking path for Black
advocates, focusing on BAJI's theory of transformational solidarity: migrant rights
activists and activists in the Movement for Black Lives must collaborate in order to
ensure Black immigrants  and  undocumented   Black people are part of the larger
narrative and being advocated for. This collaboration will create a fuller, contextual-
ized, and better-informed picture of what criminal and immigration  law reform
can-and   should-look   like. This collaboration will add even more texture to the
still-burgeoning, and increasingly intersectional, Movement for Black Lives.1
   During the weekend  of April 8 to 10, 2016, the Black Immigration  Network
(BIN)  hosted its biennial Kinship Assembly, Black Love Beyond Borders, in Los

  * J.D. 2016, Georgetown University Law Center. @ 2016, Breanne Palmer.
  1. The Movement for Black Lives refers to not only the formal Black Lives Matter network, consisting of
local chapters of Black Lives Matter, but also the efforts of individuals and grassroots groups not formally
affiliated with the Black Lives Matter network. Each of these groups is engaged in the work of modern Black
liberation.


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