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Let
me begin by thanking the organizers for inviting me to
engage in this discussion.
The
nature of the remarks I am to offer—which focus on the
issues of race/racism, xenophobia and migration—are more
than enough for a multiple week class. Unfortunately,
or perhaps fortunately for you, I do not have multiple
weeks to deliver it. So, in the next fifteen minutes
my hope is to offer an overview of the relationship of
these issues and end with some suggestions regarding a
manner to rethink global solidarity in the context of
migration in the 21st century.
We
must begin by establishing, without any ambiguity, that
“race” is not a biological or genetic category, but is
a political construction. The origin of ALL of humanity
is to be found in southern Africa, so in that sense, all
of humanity is African.
Yet
the notion of race, and the corresponding practice and
theory of racism is very real. Prior to both the so-called
“Reconquista” in Spain with the Catholicization
of Iberia and the purge of the Moors and the Jews in the
15th century, as well as the English occupation and colonization
of Ireland in the 16th century, “race,” as we have come
to know it, did not exist on planet Earth. While there
were certainly religious, tribal, ethnic and imperial
conflicts, this was transformed over the course of the
end of the 15th century and throughout the 16th and 17th
centuries. Race came to be associated with so-called
inferior and superior peoples, and fundamentally with
the occupation of lands and the displacement of populations.
Eventually, this came to be associated with skin color,
but it is worth noting that in the beginning race did
not depend on skin color, with Irish Catholics and Spanish
Jews being a case in point. This overall process of racial
construction was linked with the development of capitalism
and in that context, the notion of race must be understood
as an ideological and institutional mechanism
for both the suppression of specific populations in perpetuity,
as well as the introduction of social control over the
working masses as a whole, be they of the suppressed/oppressed
population or of the suppressor/oppressor population.
In
Latin America, the art form and classification code called
the castas, along with the introduction in both
North and South America of slavery for life for specific
populations—Africans—and marginalization and genocide
perpetrated others—Indigenous—had nothing to do with science
generally or genetics specifically. Rather, it became
a means to divide up populations, turning them against
one another through the associated system of racial privileges
that tended to be meted out according to how close someone
got to being supposedly pure white. “White” was always
the reference point for the dominant bloc, even though
this did not in any way mean that everyone who was designated
by the ruling classes to be “white” was automatically
part of the ruling classes. It has also been the case
that who is and is not considered white in a specific
society is not always self-evident. A classic example
from US history in the early 20th century was
the debate over whether Armenians were to be considered
“white” or not.
In
sum, the construction of race was linked, from the beginning,
to the rise of capitalism and later imperialism. It was
not an add-on or a device that was to be used and thrown
away at a whim.
The
second piece that is important to grasp about race and
migration is that the current global wave of migration,
which the International Labor Organization (ILO) estimates
to be more than 86 million, is fundamentally different
from earlier waves during the history of capitalism, i.e.,
those from the 1500s through the early 1900s. In the
waves of migrations that began with the invasion of the
Western Hemisphere and the colonization of other parts
of what we reference today as the global
South, the migrating populations were part of the process
of colonization and, as in the cases of the USA, Canada,
Australia, and South Africa, to name just four locales,
the establishment of formal settler states. These
migrating populations, irrespective of whether they were
persecuted in their European countries of origin, served
as part of a process in the construction of colonial and
settler states. Even when they engaged in wars of independence
with their European colonial sponsors, these were struggles
that were not truly emancipatory, but were struggles to
redefine the terms of a particular relationship. To put
it another way, most of the independence struggles represented
a break with a colonial power—and a renegotiation of the
relationship—but not a break with the key social and economic
institutions, e.g., slavery in the Western Hemisphere;
the Latifundia in Latin America, that were hallmarks of
the colonial period. As such, the native populations
were never true allies with the insurgents, but were,
at best, allies of convenience (example: Native Americans
used by both sides in the French and Indian Wars 1754-1763).
It
should be noted that there were other migration patterns
that did not originate in Europe. Migration from China
and Japan to the Western Hemisphere in the mid to late
19th century, for instance, had a different character
and particularly in the case of the migration of these
Asian populations to the USA, there was intense hostility
that was visited upon Asian migrants, a hostility that
has lasted for generations. This is worth noting since
the European migrants, even when experiencing a hostile
reception by prior European migrants, were generally absorbed
into the “white bloc” after their ‘credentials’ as white
people were established. Asian migrants in the 19th and
early through mid-20th centuries faced a very different
challenge since they were not accepted into a white bloc.
They were placed, depending on the country or territory
to which they migrated, into a racial hierarchy but they
were not considered white people.
The
character of migrations began to change in the early 1900s
when populations from colonies proceeded to relocate to
the imperial centers. The migration patterns that we
are witnessing today are a continuation and acceleration
of this process. In the absence of self-determination
and with the deformed economic and political structures
imposed on colonial and semi-colonial territories, populations
began to shift. Separately, there were population shifts
between and among colonial and semi-colonial countries.
The migration of Haitians to the Dominican Republic that
began in the 19th century, for instance, is just such
an example of the latter, and one that reminds us of the
manner in which xenophobia can take on genocidal proportions
when a so-called native population is manipulated through
fear. Specifically, race was constructed in such
a way in the Dominican Republic that there was a generalized
denial of the African roots of most of the population
and a distain for anyone described as being “black.”
The dictator Rafael Trujillo took advantage of this situation
to move an anti-Haitian pogrom in 1937 in which more than
20,000 Haitians were murdered, having been blamed by Trujillo
as having been the source of the Dominican Republic’s
many problems.
Current
waves of migration, then, have as their source both a
continuation of these factors, plus additional factors,
including but not limited to wars, neo-liberal globalization,
imperial foreign policies and climate change. Time does
not permit me to examine each of these. In this situation,
however, we must note, that the ‘racialization’
of migrants has taken on a particular significance.
At
the global scale such racialization is found in the broad
characterization of European/white vs. non-European/non-white.
What this means, particularly in the post-World War II
context, is that the “problem” of migration has usually
been associated not with the general question of migrants
and refugees, but the specific question of the shifting
of non-white populations away from their homes of origin
to the imperial metropole (usually meaning to the country
that was the historical imperial/colonial dominationist
force over their particular oppressed nation/territory/people).
The non-white migrant has been presented as the ‘evil’
or the problem by the so-called “nativist” forces in the
global North on a racial basis. As the theorist Etienne
Balibar has pointed out, however, this racial construction
is a bit different from traditional racial notions since
it does not OVERTLY presume superiority/inferiority (certainly
on an alleged genetic basis) but rather articulates an
‘other-ness’ based on cultural incompatibility.
To
explain this point for a moment, let us take an example
from the United States. As you know, the issue of illegal
or undocumented migration has been a major watchword for
the political Right since at least the 1970s. In the
USA, the face of the undocumented migrant is, in the popular
imagination, not color neutral but is brown and black.
It is largely—though not exclusively—the face of the Latino
despite the fact that undocumented migration has never
been restricted to this group. In the 1980s and early
1990s there was significant Irish migration to the USA,
an important percentage of which was undocumented. Yet
Irish migration to the USA during that period was never
defined by right-wing or mainstream sources as being problematic.
For all intents and purposes it was ignored. Documented
AND undocumented migration from Haiti, the Dominican Republic
and Mexico during that same period, however, was defined
as being a problem because the unspoken message was that
the Irish can be absorbed into the dominant white bloc
in the USA, whereas the Haitians, Dominicans and Mexicans
represent an “OTHER” population that is culturally incompatible.
The
racialization of migrants, however, is not something that
is limited to conflicts in and with the global North.
The xenophobic response to migrants in parts of the global
South, be it the genocide against Haitians in the 1930s
under the Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Republic
or the more recent attacks on migrants in South Africa
by mobs, points to forces largely driven by limited—and
often declining—resources that results in toxic competition
between populations. This competition becomes racialized
where the migrants are portrayed as the force that is
incompatible with the needs and existence
of the dominant population. They become the “Alien,”
so to speak, both literally—that is, in terms of the law—and
figuratively—that is, in terms of the popular imagination.
This competition for resources, we must note, is not something
that exists in the abstract but is a phenomenon related
to the rise of neo-liberal globalization and the dramatic
polarization of wealth and resources we have witnessed
on a world scale. When we have a situation, for instance,
where 225 individuals have the accumulated wealth of the
bottom 47% of the world’s population it becomes clear
that those at the bottom will be struggling to make do
with what is left to them by those who have accumulated
so much.
With
regard the question of migration and the dialectic between
the global North and the global South, we must understand
that the political Right plays upon what a US Hip Hop/Rap
group called “Public Enemy” described once as a fear
of a Black planet. When I use the term “Black” here
I mean it more in the manner that many of us used it in
the 1960s and 1970s, that is a term referencing not just
people of more recent African origin but people from the
former colonies and semi-colonies. Changing global demographics
along with changing economics and politics have become
a source of fear and insecurity for much of the global
North, specifically, for the so-called white populations.
The fundamental source of this insecurity actually is
rooted in both the weakening of traditional imperialist
relationships along with the rise of neo-liberal globalization
and its transformation of both domestic and international
conditions for working people. To put it another way,
as the living standard for the working population in the
global North declines due to the neo-liberal transformation—including
the transference of wealth to the rich—the ‘spatial’ violations
that are the result of migration come to represent more
of a perceived threat to that same population. That “threat”
may be in terms of competition for employment in certain
sectors, but more often than not it is a psychological
threat in which the working populations of the global
North come to recognize that imperialism’s impact can
no longer be perceived as being solely an external matter
but is also manifested internally…that is, the security
that once existed is now long-gone.
What
are some of the implications of this analysis? Let me
suggest the following.
1.
A progressive response to migration cannot be grounded on abstract moral
principles but must be grounded in an understanding of
the historic relationship between the migrating population
and the target of migration: The absence of an analysis that
provides a context inevitably leads to failure. If one
cannot explain the historical roots as to why a migration
pattern is unfolding and the relationship of the policies
of the migration target to the migrating population, then
the migration may not make any sense or can be perceived
as the equivalent of an invasion.
2.
The destruction of lands, nations and peoples by imperialism, and its
current incarnation as neo-liberal globalization is resulting in unprecedented
population shifts: The impact of imperialism
on land use, climate change, ethnic rivalries, etc., is
leading to increasing competition for resources as well
as population shifts. In this environment right-wing
ideologies, grounded in a racialization of other populations,
has advanced in both the global North and global South
with the objective of excluding or marginalizing migrant
populations, and in some cases, exterminating them altogether.
3.
Racialization, as a process, is not only a matter of the perception of
the migrating population by the ‘native’ population but
also the manner through which the migrating population
perceives dynamics within migrating target nation:
This particular point is one that could and should be
the topic of an entire discussion. The migrating population
does not migrate with a blank consciousness, particularly
on matters of race. It travels to the target nation with
a racial consciousness that is shaped by the ideologies,
histories and experiences from the home country. It is
also shaped by the perceptions of the racial hierarchy
in the target country. Thus, and by way of example, Latinos
migrating to the USA from the Dominican Republic, are
shaped by the historical antipathy between the Dominican
Republic and Haiti; the bizarre racial denial and oppression
that was perpetrated by the Trujillo regime; as well as
understanding of how white supremacy operates in the USA,
including but not limited to which populations have what
standing in the US imperial/racial hierarchy.
4.
A radical, anti-racist practice must be introduced in order to build
solidarity and respond to anti-immigrant and xenophobic
ideologies and practices: The racialization of
current migration has several objectives. One is the
creation of a permanent, marginal, powerless and subordinate
working stratum. This is summarized in the notion that
migrant workers will do work that ‘native’ workers avoid.
The other aspect of the racialization is exactly the opposite,
that is, the use of the “Other” as a way of creating a
renewal of the dominant white bloc and the uniting behind
a right-wing populist agenda. Right-wing populism can
sometimes be confused for progressive, popular-democratic
politics, if one avoids race. Right-wing populism often
seizes on language from the Left in order to strengthen
its base among working people from the ‘native’ population.
To break this alignment, the racist nature of right-wing
populism must be unpacked and exposed and a politics advanced
that focuses on the development of an alternative, progressive
bloc.
The
struggle for justice for migrant workers is directly connected
to the struggle against neo-liberal globalization. The
destruction of Earth’s resources and the massive accumulation
of wealth by a minority of the planet to the disadvantage
of the majority, means that billions find themselves in
a struggle for survival. One option has become migration,
but rather than migration being accepted as the reality
of a modern economy, it has brought with it demonization
of those who migrate, covert exploitation of the migrant,
and the use of the migrant in fundamentally racist ways
to serve as scapegoat for the economic injustice being
felt by so many.
The
struggle for justice for the migrant worker is inextricably
connected to the fight for racial justice, and, indeed,
the fight for broader social justice. This struggle must
be integrated into our various battles and not placed
to one side as one additional issue on a long list of
issues.
Thank
you.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar
with the Institute
for Policy Studies, the immediate past president ofTransAfrica Forum and co-author of, Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path
toward Social Justice (University of California Press), which examines the crisis
of organized labor in the USA. Click here to contact Mr. Fletcher.