Accompaniment With Im Migrant Communities

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Accompaniment with Im/Migrant Communities

Author: Kristin Elizabeth Yarris
language: en
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Release Date: 2024
This edited volume is a collective conversation between anthropologists, activists, students, im/migrants, and community members about accompaniment--a feminist care-based, decolonial mode of ethnographic engagement. Across the chapters, contributors engage with accompaniment with im/migrant communities in a variety of ways that challenge traditional boundaries between researcher-participant, scholar-activist, and academic-community member to explicitly address issues of power, inequality, and well-being for the communities they work with and alongside.
Accompaniment with Im/migrant Communities

Author: Kristin Elizabeth Yarris
language: en
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Release Date: 2024-07-09
This collection brings together the experiences and voices of anthropologists whose engaged work with im/migrant communities pushes the boundaries of ethnography toward a feminist, care-based, decolonial mode of ethnographic engagement called “accompaniment.” Accompaniment as anthropological research and praxis troubles the boundaries of researcher-participant, scholar-activist, and academic-community to explicitly address issues of power, inequality, and the broader social purpose of the work. More than two dozen contributors show how accompaniment is not merely a mode of knowledge production but an ethical commitment that calls researchers to action in solidarity with those whose lives we seek to understand. The volume stands as a collective conversation about possibilities for caring and decolonial forms of ethnographic engagement with im/migrant communities. This volume is ideal for scholars, students, immigrant activists, instructors, and those interested in social justice work. Contributors Carolina Alonso Bejarano Anna Aziza Grewe Alaska Burdette Whitney L. Duncan Carlos Escalante Villagran Christina M. Getrich Tobin Hansen Lauren Heidbrink Dan Heiman Josiah Heyman Sarah Horton Nolan Kline Alana M. W. LeBrón Lupe López William D. Lopez Aida López Huinil Mirian A. Mijangos García Nicole L. Novak Mariela Nuñez-Janes Ana Ortez-Rivera Juan Edwin Pacay Mendoza Salvador Brandon Pacay Mendoza María Engracia Robles Robles Delmis Umanzor Erika Vargas Reyes Kristin E. Yarris
The Devil's Fruit

Author: Dvera I. Saxton
language: en
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Release Date: 2021-02-12
The Devil's Fruit describes the facets of the strawberry industry as a harm industry, and explores author Dvera Saxton’s activist ethnographic work with farmworkers in response to health and environmental injustices. She argues that dealing with devilish—as in deadly, depressing, disabling, and toxic—problems requires intersecting ecosocial, emotional, ethnographic, and activist labors. Through her work as an activist medical anthropologist, she found the caring labors of engaged ethnography take on many forms that go in many different directions. Through chapters that examine farmworkers’ embodiment of toxic pesticides and social and workplace relationships, Saxton critically and reflexively describes and analyzes the ways that engaged and activist ethnographic methods, frameworks, and ethics aligned and conflicted, and in various ways helped support still ongoing struggles for farmworker health and environmental justice in California. These are problems shared by other agricultural communities in the U.S. and throughout the world.