Ethnographic studies of immigration and crime were prominent in the early decades of the twentieth century, yet contemporary scholarship has been dominated by quantitative approaches. In this review, we heed the call of those who have lamented the quot collective amnesia quot and quot newness fetish quot that characterize much of contemporary criminology and revisit classic ethnographies of immigration and crime, with an emphasis on the unique methodological contributions of this early work. Next, we synthesize the small but growing body of contemporary ethnographic research on immigration and crime, which includes the policing of immigrant communities in the age of quot crimmigration; quot the lived experiences inside contemporary deportation/detention regimes; the integration experiences of Muslims, a highly marginalized but understudied population; and immigrants rsquo unique vulnerabilities to and experiences of victimization, to illustrate the value of qualitative approaches for capturing the nuances of immigrants rsquo experiences in the new age of immigration.
CITATION STYLE
Zaatut, A., & Dipietro, S. M. (2023, January 27). Revitalizing Ethnographic Studies of Immigration and Crime. Annual Review of Criminology. Annual Reviews Inc. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-criminol-030421-033048
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