New Destinations of Empire

About The Book

In 1986 the Compact of Free Association marked the formal end of U.S. colonialism in the Republic of the Marshall Islands while simultaneously re-entrenching imperial power dynamics between the two countries. The U.S.-RMI Compact at once enshrined exclusive U.S. military access to the islands and established the right of “visa-free” migration to the United States for Marshallese citizens leading to a Marshallese diaspora whose largest population resettled in the seemingly unlikely destination of Springdale Arkansas. . An “all-white town” by design for much of the twentieth century Springdale having nearly quadrupled in population since 1980 has been remade by Marshallese as well as Latinx immigration. Through ethnographic policy-based and archival research in Guåhan Saipan Hawai’i Arkansas and Washington D.C. New Destinations of Empire tells the story of these place-based transformations revealing how U.S. empire both causes and constrains mobility for its subjects shaping migrants’ experiences of racialization citizenship and belonging in new destinations of empire. . In examining two spatial processes?imperialism and migration?together Emily Mitchell-Eaton reveals connections and flows between presumably distant “remote” sites like Arkansas and the Marshall Islands showing them to be central to the United States’ most urgent political issues: immigration racial justice militarization and decolonization.
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