Welcome the Wretched: In Defense of the "Criminal Alien"

Flyer for 3-4-2025 crg forum
March 4, 2025

Welcome the Wretched: In Defense of the "Criminal Alien"

03.04.2025 | 12 - 1:30 PM | 691 Social Sciences Building (CRG Conference Room)
with César Cuauhtémoc García Hernández (Gregory H. Williams Chair in Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, Moritz College of Law - Ohio State University)

In the fevered battles over immigration, Democrats and Republicans alike agree on this: that migrants who have committed a crime have no place in this country. But targeting migrants because they have committed a crime is a short-sighted appeal to nativist fear. To predicate a migrant’s right to stay in the country on whether they are law-abiding and therefore deserving or “criminal” and undeserving does little to improve public safety and has an especially devastating impact on low-income migrants of color.

While César Cuauhtémoc García Hernández’s first book, Migrating to Prison, focuses on the explosion of migrant detention centers over the past decades, Welcome the Wretched tackles head-on what happens when a deeply flawed and racist criminal legal system and immigration system converge to senselessly cruel effect. Drawing on everything from history to legal analyses and philosophy, García Hernández counters the fundamental assumption that criminal activity has a rightful place in immigration matters, arguing that instead of using the criminal legal system to identify people to deport, the United States should place a reimagined sense of citizenship and solidarity at the center of immigration policy.César Cuauhtémoc García Hernández is the Gregory H. Williams Chair in Civil Rights and Civil Liberties at the Ohio State University Moritz College of Law and an immigration lawyer. He has appeared in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, NPR, The Guardian, and many other venues. The author of Crimmigration Law as well as Migrating to Prison and Welcome the Wretched (both published by The New Press).


Event sponsored by the Center for Race and Gender, the Berkeley Interdisciplinary Migration Initiative, and IGS's Race, Ethnicity, and Immigration Colloquium.