Public Social Science at Work: Contesting Hostility Towards Nicaraguan Migrants in Costa Rica
Nicaraguan migration to Costa Rica is one of the most salient cases of South-South migration in Latin America. Despite Costa Rica’s self-representation as a peaceful and democratic society, Nicaraguan migrants in Costa Rica, the main foreign-born community in the country, are widely portrayed in d...
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Formato: | capítulo de libro |
Lenguaje: | Spanish / Castilian |
Publicado: |
Springer
2020
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Acceso en línea: | https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007%2F978-3-642-28012-2 https://repositorio.iis.ucr.ac.cr/handle/123456789/698 |
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Sumario: | Nicaraguan migration to Costa Rica is one of the most salient cases of South-South migration in Latin America.
Despite Costa Rica’s self-representation as a peaceful and democratic society, Nicaraguan migrants in Costa
Rica, the main foreign-born community in the country, are widely portrayed in derogatory terms, for example
as violent and criminal and in general as “threatening Others” (Sandoval 2004). This chapter explores a set of
examples of analyses of critical interventions – regarding immigration law, social imaginaries around which representations
of Nicaraguans are framed, and participatory work carried out with impoverished communities –
in order to reflect on the ways in which social sciences in Costa Rica attempt to intervene both in the everyday
hostility of Costa Rican society and in the ways in which Nicaraguans contest that hostility. Responding to
Michael Burawoy’s call for a “public sociology” (2005, 2007), the chapter reflects on how debates around public
social sciences could enrich the political, institutional, and conceptual location of migration studies in Costa
Rica. |
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