Sanctuary Practices in International Perspectives: Migration, Citizenship and Social Movements

Couverture
Randy Lippert, Sean Rehaag
Routledge, 12 oct. 2012 - 288 pages

Sanctuary Practices in Perspective examines the diverse, complex, and mutating practice of providing sanctuary to asylum-seekers. The ancient tradition of church sanctuary underwent a revival in the late 1970s. Christian churches began providing physical protection to migrants living without legal status and who were facing imminent deportation in church buildings and communities: first in the United Kingdom and then in the United States, Canada, and several other European countries. These practices arose amidst a dramatic increase in the number of asylum-seekers arriving in the West, and a corresponding escalation in national and international efforts to discourage and control their arrival through myriad threats of deportation and other means. This collection of papers by prominent US, European, and Canadian scholars is the first to place contemporary sanctuary practices in international, theoretical, and historical perspective. Moving beyond isolated case studies of sanctuary activities and movements, it reveals sanctuary as a far more complex, regional, theoretically-rich, and institutionally adaptable set of practices.

 

Table des matières

sanctuary across countries institutions and disciplines
1
historical theological legal theoretical
13
old and new
71
international comparative and case studies
119
Cities of Sanctuary and military sanctuaries
189
Index
258
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À propos de l'auteur (2012)

Randy Lippert

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