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Démanteler les frontières book cover
Démanteler les frontières
Contre l’impérialisme et le colonialisme
2015
First Published
2.50
Average Rating
301
Number of Pages
Aujourd’hui, plus que jamais, il est insensé de parler d’immigration tout en faisant abstraction des catalyseurs des déplacements de population : le colonialisme, l’impérialisme et le néolibéralisme. C’est là le point de départ que revendique Démanteler les frontières. Alliant théorie politique (Fanon, Foucault, Negri et d’autres) et expérience de terrain, l’auteure aborde la question des droits migratoires dans le cadre d’une analyse critique du capitalisme mondialisé, de l’exploitation et du racisme qui sont à l’origine des frontières et de l’État-nation.Au cœur de cette analyse se trouve le concept d’« impérialisme de frontières », qui désigne le processus de création et de maintien structurel des violences et des conditions de précarité liées aux migrations, et déboulonne le mythe de la bienveillance occidentale à l’égard des migrants.À la fois manifeste, témoignage et manuel de survie, ce livre donne aussi la parole à plusieurs militants et personnes migrantes.
Avg Rating
2.50
Number of Ratings
2
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Author

Harsha Walia
Harsha Walia
Author · 4 books

Harsha Walia is an author and activist who is formally trained in the law. She immigrated from India and currently resides in Vancouver, on the lands of the Indigenous Coast Salish people, and works as an advocate in the poorest postal code in Canada. Harsha has been named one of the most influential South Asians in BC by the Vancouver Sun and one of the ten most popular left-wing journalists by the Georgia Straight in 2010. Award-winning author Naomi Klein has called Harsha “one of Canada’s most brilliant and effective political organizers.” She is the winner of the Canadian Center for Policy Alternatives "Power of Youth" award. Harsha's writings have appeared in over fifty academic journals, anthologies, and magazines, including Briarpatch, Canadian Dimension, Dominion, Feministing, Fuze, Left Turn, Mondoweiss, People of Color Organize, Rabble, Racilicious, Sanhati, Z Magazine, and others. She has contributed essays to academic journals including Race and Class, as well as chapters in the anthologies Power of Youth: Youth and community-led activism in Canada; Racism and Borders: Representation, Repression, Resistance; Beyond Walls and Cages; Stay Solid; Broken Trouble: A Toolbox for Revolution; Organize! Building from the Local for Global Justice, and the Winter We Danced. As an activist, Harsha is a cofounder of the migrant justice group No One Is Illegal and the progressive South Asian network Radical Desis. She is also an organizer in the Annual Women’s Memorial March Committee, Defenders of the Land Network, Housing Justice Coalition, and sits on the boards of the South Asian Network for Secularism and Democracy as well as Shit Harper Did. She is a youth mentor for Check Your Head and an editorial collective member at Feminist Wire. Harsha has made a number of presentations to the United Nations on social and economic justice issues and is a commentator and speaker at conferences, campuses, and media outlets across North America.

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