
Dr. Emma Shaw CraneAssistant Professor of Anthropology,Stanford University.
Florida has long been a domestic laboratory for the policing and confinement of migrants. This talk examines how the escalating war on migrants is spatialized and sustained as a labor regime, Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork on the agricultural peripheries of Miami, it engages unregulated informal housing and alternative to detention” surveillance programs, These diffuse and dispersed forms of spatial control produce cascading social and political foreclosures for primarily indigenous Maya migrant tenant workers Asking a Southern question of the U.S. suburb, this talk develops the analytic of the periphery within to luminate an architecture of migrant dispossession that operates not through capture, onsnemehtana dlsappaarahca butthtoughtheerate and parceled puoliteration of the labor camp.
