Humanitarianism from Below

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781479825615

Faith, Welfare, and the Role of Casas de Migrantes in Mexico

Price:
Sale price$206.00


By Alejandro Olayo-Mendez
Imprint: NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:

Pages:
288

Description

Alejandro Olayo-Mendez is Assistant Professor of Social Work at Boston College. His latest article Essential, Disposable, and Excluded in the Journal of Poverty discusses the experience of Latino immigrants in the United States during the pandemic.

"Explores the rich network of 150 casas de migrante (roughly "migrant shelters") in Mexico, which have received far too little scholarly attention given their central importance to migrants from throughout the world. What emerges from Olayo-Mendez's multi-year journey and "mobile" methodology - as social worker, volunteer in multiple casas, and academic - is a migrant-centered view of these institutions, which are not "neutral," but are responsive to migrants' immediate and long-term needs, and thus are necessarily engaged in advocacy based on these needs, as well as their underlying values and (often) their faith commitments."--Donald M. Kerwin, Vice-President for Advocacy, Research, and Partnerships, Jesuit Refugee Service/USA. "Makes an important contribution to the literature on humanitarianism through its analysis of Mexico's Casas de Migrante and the many roles that they play in supporting migrants' journeys. While most studies of humanitarian action focus on the work of a handful of international agencies, the fact is that local communities are on the front lines of humanitarian response. . . . Olayo-Mendez analyzes the important role of faith in the emergence and functioning of these Casas de Migrantes, which is rarely considered in the increasingly secular humanitarian sector."--Elizabeth Ferris, Georgetown University

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