855
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
1 collections
    2
    shares

      If you have found this article useful and you think it is important that researchers across the world have access, please consider donating, to ensure that this valuable collection remains Open Access.

      State Crime Journal is published by Pluto Journals, an Open Access publisher. This means that everyone has free and unlimited access to the full-text of all articles from our international collection of social science journalsFurthermore Pluto Journals authors don’t pay article processing charges (APCs).

      scite_
       
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found
      Is Open Access

      On the Death of Mame Mbaye: Racialism as the Ultimate Goal in the “Battle against Irregular Immigration”

      Published
      research-article
      State Crime Journal
      Pluto Journals
      deportation, illegalized migrants, police, racialism, Spain
      Bookmark

            Abstract

            On 15 March 2018, Mame Mbaye, a 35-year-old migrant from Senegal who lived in Spain for 11 years, died on a street in the centre of Madrid. A police raid on unauthorized street vendors caused panic among illegalized migrants, who ran away trying to avoid an arrest that could have led to their detention and deportation. Mbaye ran towards his home, located a few hundred meters down the road, but he never made it. The official version, endorsed by the Spanish court, is that Mbaye suffered a fatal cardiac failure. Some eyewitnesses claim the police suffocated him to death. The article explores how the pervasive and perverse exercise of racism on different levels against illegalized migrants results in their social and in some cases literal death. To fully grasp the tenacity with which racism and racial cruelty are applied in the immigration field, we must recognize that most other arenas that have historically served as breeding grounds for advancing racialism in western societies have been legally proscribed. In contrast, the anti-immigration arena allows for acting practically, discursively and politically in racializing and racist manners against some of the most vulnerable members in society: so-called ‘irregular’ migrants, ‘failed’ asylum seekers and ‘non-real’ refugees. The immigration field thus serves as a crucial, and perhaps the last, frontier for advancing racialism more holistically in western societies. Animating racialism as an operative ideology informs—consciously or not—those who staff the state apparatus, and society more broadly, to believe in and act upon racialized categories of othered people. In so doing, racialism legitimizes the social production and justifies the social death of illegalized migrants. The ultimate goal of this vicious dynamic, of inhumane treatment and judicial impunity, is to keep operational the racist notion that the lives of some people matter less than others.

            Content

            Author and article information

            Journal
            10.13169/statecrime
            State Crime Journal
            SCJ
            Pluto Journals
            2046-6056
            18 June 2022
            2022
            : 11
            : 1
            : 70-89
            Author notes
            Article
            10.13169/statecrime.11.1.0070
            c796fffe-ecbf-44d5-88b9-6b5202218181
            © INTERNATIONAL STATE CRIME INITIATIVE 2022

            All content is freely available without charge to users or their institutions. Users are allowed to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of the articles in this journal without asking prior permission of the publisher or the author. Articles published in the journal are distributed under a http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

            History
            Page count
            Pages: 20
            Categories
            Articles

            Criminology
            illegalized migrants,deportation,police,racialism,Spain

            References

            1. (2013) Us and Them? The Dangerous Politics of Immigration Control. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

            2. (1998) Color Conscious. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

            3. (2016) Migrant Detention in the European Union: A Thriving Business. Available online at: http://www.dei-belgique.be/IMG/pdf/migrant-detention-eu-en.pdf (accessed 2 February 2022).

            4. (2016) “Identificaciones policiales y discriminación racial en España. Evaluación de un programa para su reducción,” Boletín Criminológico, 163: 1–9.

            5. (1978) The Life of The Mind. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

            6. (2001) “Outlines of a Topography of Cruelty: Citizenship and Civility in the Era of Global Violence,” Constellations, 8(1): 15–29.

            7. (2013) “Beyond Surveillance: Racial Profiled Detention Practices in Everyday Life,” in (eds.) Living in Surveillance Societies: The State of Surveillance. Seattle, WA: CreateSpace.

            8. (2011) The Securitization of Migration: A Study of Movement and Order. London: Taylor & Francis.

            9. (2004) “Between Unity and Plurality: The Politicization and Securitization of the Discourse of Immigration in Europe,” New Political Science, 26(1): 23–49.

            10. (2017) “The Managerial Turn: The Transformation of Spanish Migration Control Policies since the Onset of the Economic Crisis,” The Howard Journal of Crime and Justice, 56(2): 198–219.

            11. (2012) Social Death: Racialized Rightlessness and the Criminalization of the Unprotected. New York: New York University Press.

            12. (2003) “Spanish Immigration Law and the Construction of Difference: Citizens and ‘Illegals’ on Europe’s Southern Border,” in (eds.) Globalization under Construction: Governmentality, Law, and Identity. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

            13. Campaña Estatal por el Cierre de los CIEs (2014) Paremos los Vuelos. Las deportaciones de inmigrantes y el boicot a Air Europa. Oviedo: Cambalache.

            14. (1955) Discourse on Colonialism. New York: Monthly Review Press.

            15. (2005) Contesting Criminality: Illegal Immigration and the Spatialization of Legality. London: Sage Publications.

            16. (2021) “Policing the (Migrant) Crisis: Stuart Hall and the Defence of Whiteness,” Security Dialogue, 53(1): 21–37.

            17. (2010) “Immigration Control, Post-Fordism, and Less Eligibility: A Materialist Critique of the Criminalization of Immigration across Europe,” Punishment and Society, 12(2): 147–167.

            18. Defensor del Pueblo (2019) Informe anual 2018: Mecanismo Nacional de Prevención. Available online at: https://www.defensordelpueblo.es/informe-mnp/mecanismo-nacional-prevencion-la-tortura-informe-anual-2018/ (accessed 12 August 2021).

            19. (2018) “The European Media Discourse on Immigration and Its Effects: A Literature Review,” Annals of the International Communication Association, 42(3): 207–223.

            20. (2016) The Colonisation of Europe. Budapest: Arktos.

            21. (2009) A Suitable Enemy: Racism, Migration and Islamophobia in Europe. London: Pluto Press.

            22. (2007) Golden Gulag: Prisons, Surplus, Crisis, and Opposition in Globalizing California. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

            23. (2009) “The Immigration Industrial Complex: Why We Enforce Immigration Policies Destined to Fail,” Sociology Compass, 3(2): 295–309.

            24. (2002) The Racial State. Oxford: Blackwell.

            25. (2015) The Utopia of Rules: On Technology, Stupidity, and the Secret Joys of Bureaucracy. Brooklyn, NY: Melville House.

            26. (2010) The Enigma of Capital: And the Crisis of Capitalism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

            27. (2016) “Neoliberalism Is a Political Project,” Jacobin Magazine. Available online at: https://www.jacobinmag.com/2016/07/david-harvey-neoliberalism-capitalism-labor-crisis-resistance/ (accessed 12 August 2021).

            28. (2017) Go Home? The Politics of Immigration Controversies. Manchester: Manchester University Press.

            29. (2015) “The Jewish State of Anxiety: Between Moral Obligation and Fearism in the Treatment of African Asylum Seekers in Israel,” Ethnic and Migration Studies, 41(4): 580–598.

            30. (2019a) “The Uncomfortable Truth about Luck: Reflections on Getting Access to the Spanish State Deportation Field,” Social Anthropology, 27(1): 84–99.

            31. (2019b) “Departheid: The Draconian Governance of Illegalized Migrants in Western States,” Conflict and Society, 5: 19–40.

            32. (forthcoming) “Qualifying Deportation: How Police Translation of ‘Dangerous Foreign Criminals’ Led to Expansive Deportation Practices in Spain,” Security Dialogue.

            33. (2011) “The View of the Border: News Framing of the Definition, Causes, and Solutions to Illegal Immigration,” Mass Communication and Society, 14(3): 292–314.

            34. (ed.) Globalization under Construction: Governmentality, Law, and Identity. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

            35. (2015) “Racial Capitalism,” Critical Ethnic Studies, 1(1): 76–85.

            36. (2017) “Emergent Critical Analytics for Alternative Humanities: Responses.” Lateral: Journal of the Cultural Studies Association, 6(1). Available online at: https://csalateral.org/issue/6–1/forum-alt-humanities-institutionality-response-melamed/ (accessed 12 August 2021).

            37. (2012) “Legal Violence: Immigration Law and the Lives of Central American Immigrants,” American Journal of Sociology, 117(5): 1380–1421.

            38. (2018) Governing Irregular Migration: Bordering Culture, Labour, and Security in Spain. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press.

            39. (2005) Racialization in Theory and Practice. New York: Oxford University Press.

            40. (2018) Racial Formation in the United States. New York: Routledge.

            41. Open Society Foundations (2019) Under Suspicion: The Impact of Discriminatory Policing in Spain. Available online at: https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/resrep27266.pdf (accessed 12 August 2021).

            42. (2010) Criminalización Racista de los Migrantes en Europa. Granada, Spain: Comares.

            43. (2011) Freedom with Violence: Race, Sexuality, and the U.S. State. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

            44. (2000) Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

            45. (2014) “Ex aqua: The Mediterranean Basin, Africans on the Move, and the Politics of Policing,” Theoria, 61(141): 55–75.

            46. (2019) “Health Care versus Border Care: Justification and Hypocrisy in the Multilevel Negotiation of Irregular Migrants’ Access to Fundamental Rights and Services,” Journal of Immigrant and Refugee Studies, 17(1): 61–76.

            47. (2014) “The Whiteness of Police,” American Quarterly, 66(4): 1091–1099.

            48. (2018) “The Black Mediterranean and the Politics of the Imagination,” Middle East Report, 286: 3–9.

            49. (2013) Undoing Border Imperialism. Oakland, CA: AK Press.

            Comments

            Comment on this article