Full Description
Since the late nineties, the UK has deported thousands of people to Jamaica. Many of these 'deportees' left the Caribbean as infants and grew up in the UK. In Deporting Black Britons, Luke de Noronha traces the life stories of four such men, who have been exiled from their parents, partners, children and friends by deportation. He explores how 'Black Britons' survive once they are returned to Jamaica and asks what their memories of poverty, racist policing and illegality reveal about contemporary Britain.
Based on years of research with deported people and their families, Deporting Black Britons presents stories of survival and hardship in both the UK and Jamaica. These intimate portraits testify to the damage wrought by violent borders, opening up wider questions about racism, belonging and deservingness in anti-immigrant times.
Contents
1 Introduction
2 Jason
3 Ricardo
4 Chris
5 Denico
6 Family and friends: Witnessing deportation and hierarchies of (non) citizenship
7 Post-deportation: Citizenship and the racist world order
8 Deportation as foreign policy: Meanings of development and the ordering of (im)mobility
Conclusion
Afterword, by Chris
Index