Session Submission Summary
Share...

Direct link:

From Surveillance to Solidarity: Teaching Amid the Immigration Crisis (Co-sponsored by Race, Gender, and Class Section)

Tue, August 11, 12:00 to 1:30pm, TBA

Session Submission Type: Paper Session (90 minute)

Description

Amid escalating anti-immigrant sentiment and state-sanctioned violence, sociologists are increasingly asked to ground their teaching in the threatening realities that shape the lives of immigrant and international students, as well as their own. The classroom can feel like one of the most precarious spaces where lectures, discussions, and even syllabi can be recorded, circulated, and weaponized by hostile actors or law enforcement. Yet, as Chandra Mohanty (1989) reminds us, the classroom is also a “practice of liberation”, a space to collectively address fear, care for one another, and cultivate critical understanding of the social forces behind immigration policies and xenophobic narratives. These dynamics are deeply intertwined with race, gender, class, and global inequalities, as well as economic anxieties surrounding unemployment and national security. This session invites educators, scholars, and activists to share pedagogical strategies that navigate these tensions: How can we address, or fail to address, executive orders, ICE actions, and protests that can directly affect the lives of students and instructors? How might we transform the classroom from a site of surveillance and anxiety into a space of solidarity, healing, and collective resistance?

Sub Unit

Cosponsor

Presider

Individual Presentations

Session Organizer