|
Part III: Recent Developments
Political Refugees or Economic
Immigrants?: A New "Old Debate"
within the Haitian Immigrant
Communities but with
Contestations and Division
CAROLLE CHARLES
"REFUGEE" CATEGORIES ARE usually understood and used as political
categories that defined the status of distinct population groups. Usually,
they refer to a type of forced migration. The definition presumes that
the displaced people involved in the process are not the free agents of their
predicaments; they are rather the victims. Moreover, these categories are
rooted within the world-political system, reflecting state-to-state relations
and/or states-and-citizens relationships. Thus, these political categories
of political status are also categories of otherness. As such, not only
are they expressions of relations of power but they also epitomized systems
of exclusion and practices of marginalization. Consequently, they are
subject to contention, resistance, and/or adaptation. Those in positions to
define who are refugees as well as those being defined as refugees can
manipulate these categories as they fit their own interests and agendas.
|
|