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"Local" Migration State: The Site-Specific Devolution of Immigration Enforcement in the U.S. South

NCJ Number
238241
Journal
Law & Policy Volume: 34 Issue: 2 Dated: April 2012 Pages: 159-190
Author(s)
Mathew Coleman
Date Published
April 2012
Length
32 pages
Annotation
This article examines the implementation of 287(g) authority and Secure Communities.
Abstract
This article examines the implementation of 287(g) authority and Secure Communities by several law enforcement agencies in Wake County and Durham County, NC. The author argues that despite being federally supervised programs, 287(g) and Secure Communities take shape within specific political, legal, policing, and biographic contexts, and, as such, take on a site-specific form. The author concludes that although site specificity is a characteristic of devolved immigration enforcement in the U.S. context, devolution also predictably relocates interior immigration enforcement to immigrant populations' spaces of social reproduction. Accordingly, programs like 287(g) and Secure Communities work at a suprasite level to amplify immigrant populations' everyday insecurities. (Published Abstract)