Banished Citizens

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A01=Marla A. Ramirez
american xenophobia
Author_Marla A. Ramirez
border politics
Category=JBFH
Category=JBSL1
Category=NH
Category=NHK
Category=NHTB
citizenship denial
citizenship rights
cultural citizenship
deportation effects
deportation resistance
economic depression
economic scapegoating
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnic cleansing
ethnic Mexican deportation
exile experience
family separation
forced migration history
Francisco Balderrama Decade of Betrayal
gendered migration
generational trauma
Great Depression Mexican Americans
historical injustice
historical memory
immigration history
immigration injustice
immigration policy
intergenerational consequences
Kelly Lytle Hernandez Migra!
Kirkus Best Non Fiction 2025
Latina history
Linda Gordon The Great Arizona Orphan Abduction
Mae Ngai Impossible Subjects
mass deportation
Mexican American civil rights
Mexican American deportation
Mexican American women history
mexican americans
mexican diaspora
mexican identity
Mexican Repatriation
migrant families
Natalia Molina How Race Is Made in America
oral history
population removal
racial discrimination
repatriation campaign
return migration
social welfare
transnational migration
undocumented immigrants
US citizenship deportation
Vicki Ruiz From Out of the Shadows
women immigrants history
women's resistance

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674295940
  • Weight: 589g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Oct 2025
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A Kirkus Reviews Best Nonfiction Book of the Year

A moving portrait of a grim period in American immigration history, when approximately one million ethnic Mexicans—mostly women and children who were US citizens—were forced to relocate across the southern border.

From 1921 to 1944, approximately one million ethnic Mexicans living in the United States were removed across the border to Mexico. What officials called “repatriation” was in fact banishment: 60 percent of those expelled were US citizens, mainly working-class women and children whose husbands and fathers were Mexican immigrants. Drawing on oral histories, transnational archival sources, and private collections, Marla A. Ramírez illuminates the lasting effects of coerced mass removal on three generations of ethnic Mexicans.

Ramírez argues that banishment served interests on both sides of the border. In the United States, the government accused ethnic Mexicans of dependence on social services in order to justify removal, thereby scapegoating them for post–World War I and Depression-era economic woes. In Mexico, meanwhile, officials welcomed returnees for their potential to bolster the labor force. In the process, all Mexicans in the United States—citizens and undocumented immigrants alike—were cast as financially burdensome and culturally foreign. Shedding particular light on the experiences of banished women, Ramírez depicts the courage and resilience of their efforts to reclaim US citizenship and return home. Nevertheless, banishment often interrupted their ability to pass on US citizenship to their children, robbed their families of generational wealth, and drastically slowed upward mobility. Today, their descendants continue to confront and resist the impact of these injustices—and are breaking the silence to ensure that this history is not forgotten.

A wrenching account of expulsion and its afterlives, Banished Citizens illuminates the continuing social, legal, and economic consequences of a removal campaign still barely acknowledged in either Mexico or the United States.

Marla A. Ramírez is Assistant Professor of History and Chicanx/e and Latinx/e Studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

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