Full Description
DREAMers and the Choreography of Protest chronicles the history of the DREAMers--the term used to describe undocumented immigrants brought to the United States as children. Based on interviews with lead activists, extensive archival research, and years of ethnographic study, Michael P. Young details the making of the DREAMer, the early organizing of undocumented youth on college campuses cooperating with nonprofit organizations, and the independent organizing of an online network of radical undocumented youth. Tracing a sequence of escalating protests--from sit-ins to detention center infiltrations and border crossing actions--Young argues that this later network of DREAMer activists pushed the immigrant rights movement away from the elite-driven, insider politics of immigration reform toward radical direct action organized by and for undocumented immigrants. In one of the first accounts of the radical factions of DREAMer activism, Young provides a detailed and engrossing counternarrative of DREAMer history that offers some pragmatic lessons for activists and the allied supporters of social movements.
Contents
Preface: "There's no movement"
Introduction: "To speak in its name": Movement Reification and Radicalization
Chapter 1: Conjuring the DREAMer
Chapter 2: Campus DREAMers
Chapter 3: DreamACTivist.org
Chapter 4: 2010, Part I: The Dream is Coming
Chapter 5: 2010, Part II: Noodles 2.0
Chapter 6: 2011: NIYA and the Bad Dreamers
Chapter 7: 2012 and 2013: Infiltrators and Coyotes
Conclusion: On the Mysteries of Movements and Radicalization
Appendix: Method and Data
Acknowledgements
Notes
References
Index