Migrant Illegality, Nation Building, and the Politics of Regularization in Canada

Regularization, a means for people living with precarious immigration status to legalize or “regularize” their status, is a central demand of immigrant rights groups across Canada. From a perspective of No Borders, does the demand for regularization, while challenging the dayto- day practices of Cit...

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Main Author: Jean McDonald
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: York University Libraries 2011-04-01
Series:Refuge
Online Access:https://refuge.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/refuge/article/view/32079
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author Jean McDonald
author_facet Jean McDonald
author_sort Jean McDonald
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description Regularization, a means for people living with precarious immigration status to legalize or “regularize” their status, is a central demand of immigrant rights groups across Canada. From a perspective of No Borders, does the demand for regularization, while challenging the dayto- day practices of Citizenship and Immigration Canada, also unintentionally reinforce state power? Historical research on regularization programs in Canada suggests that regularization programs do not eliminate migrant illegality but reconfigure it. In this way, regularization may be implicated in processes that both makes and unmakes illegality within the context of immigration and citizenship in Canada.
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spelling doaj.art-179b9a2073fb4fdea52e4ec5446ba06b2022-12-21T23:37:29ZengYork University LibrariesRefuge0229-51131920-73362011-04-0126210.25071/1920-7336.32079Migrant Illegality, Nation Building, and the Politics of Regularization in CanadaJean McDonaldRegularization, a means for people living with precarious immigration status to legalize or “regularize” their status, is a central demand of immigrant rights groups across Canada. From a perspective of No Borders, does the demand for regularization, while challenging the dayto- day practices of Citizenship and Immigration Canada, also unintentionally reinforce state power? Historical research on regularization programs in Canada suggests that regularization programs do not eliminate migrant illegality but reconfigure it. In this way, regularization may be implicated in processes that both makes and unmakes illegality within the context of immigration and citizenship in Canada.https://refuge.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/refuge/article/view/32079
spellingShingle Jean McDonald
Migrant Illegality, Nation Building, and the Politics of Regularization in Canada
Refuge
title Migrant Illegality, Nation Building, and the Politics of Regularization in Canada
title_full Migrant Illegality, Nation Building, and the Politics of Regularization in Canada
title_fullStr Migrant Illegality, Nation Building, and the Politics of Regularization in Canada
title_full_unstemmed Migrant Illegality, Nation Building, and the Politics of Regularization in Canada
title_short Migrant Illegality, Nation Building, and the Politics of Regularization in Canada
title_sort migrant illegality nation building and the politics of regularization in canada
url https://refuge.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/refuge/article/view/32079
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