As immigration from Mexico to the United States grew through the 1970s and 1980s the Border Patrol police and other state agents exerted increasing violence against ethnic Mexicans in San Diego&#x2019;s volatile border region. In response many San Diego activists rallied around the leadership of the small-scale print shop owner Herman Baca in the Chicano movement to empower Mexican Americans through Chicano self-determination. The combination of increasing repression and Chicano activism gradually produced a new conception of ethnic and racial community that included both established Mexican Americans and new Mexican immigrants. Here Jimmy Pati&#xF1;o narrates the rise of this Chicano/Mexicano consciousness and the dawning awareness that Mexican Americans and Mexicans would have to work together to fight border enforcement policies that subjected Latinos of all statuses to legal violence.<br/><br/>By placing the Chicano and Latino civil rights struggle on explicitly transnational terrain Pati&#xF1;o fundamentally reorients the understanding of the Chicano movement. Ultimately Pati&#xF1;o tells the story of how Chicano/Mexicano politics articulated an &#x201C;abolitionist&#x201D; position on immigration &#x2014; going beyond the agreed upon assumptions shared by liberals and conservatives alike that deportations are inherent to any solutions to the still burgeoning immigration debate.
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