The Response to Asymmetrical Violence in Black Space

Oakland, California has been identified as a Black city since the early days of the Great Migration. Migrants from the South brought their labor, families, and most importantly, a vision for the future of Black communities. Alongside the influx of domestic Black folks moving into the city has been a...

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Main Author: Stephanie D. Jones
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-01-01
Series:Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/14/1/33
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author Stephanie D. Jones
author_facet Stephanie D. Jones
author_sort Stephanie D. Jones
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description Oakland, California has been identified as a Black city since the early days of the Great Migration. Migrants from the South brought their labor, families, and most importantly, a vision for the future of Black communities. Alongside the influx of domestic Black folks moving into the city has been a steady stream of Black immigrants who help to push the boundaries for how Blackness is understood in Oakland. Increased anti-immigrant sentiments have added to this violence, putting undocumented immigrants at risk of suffering the abuses of landlords. In this article, I uplift the voices of Oakland community members that demonstrate the tragedies of dispossession as they tell their own geographic stories. These collective stories demonstrate the markers of dispossession on different levels as the sociospatial dynamics of Oakland are being (re)imagined. Oakland has now become one more example of the threat to Black spaces in the U.S. and gives us a roadmap for how these spaces will be reimagined under asymmetrical violence.
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spelling doaj-art-e0f6e7992b2b454f9d4d705719c7f16d2025-01-24T13:49:44ZengMDPI AGSocial Sciences2076-07602025-01-011413310.3390/socsci14010033The Response to Asymmetrical Violence in Black SpaceStephanie D. Jones0Africana Studies Field Group, Pitzer College, Claremont, CA 91711, USAOakland, California has been identified as a Black city since the early days of the Great Migration. Migrants from the South brought their labor, families, and most importantly, a vision for the future of Black communities. Alongside the influx of domestic Black folks moving into the city has been a steady stream of Black immigrants who help to push the boundaries for how Blackness is understood in Oakland. Increased anti-immigrant sentiments have added to this violence, putting undocumented immigrants at risk of suffering the abuses of landlords. In this article, I uplift the voices of Oakland community members that demonstrate the tragedies of dispossession as they tell their own geographic stories. These collective stories demonstrate the markers of dispossession on different levels as the sociospatial dynamics of Oakland are being (re)imagined. Oakland has now become one more example of the threat to Black spaces in the U.S. and gives us a roadmap for how these spaces will be reimagined under asymmetrical violence.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/14/1/33OaklandimmigrantspaceBlack geographies
spellingShingle Stephanie D. Jones
The Response to Asymmetrical Violence in Black Space
Social Sciences
Oakland
immigrant
space
Black geographies
title The Response to Asymmetrical Violence in Black Space
title_full The Response to Asymmetrical Violence in Black Space
title_fullStr The Response to Asymmetrical Violence in Black Space
title_full_unstemmed The Response to Asymmetrical Violence in Black Space
title_short The Response to Asymmetrical Violence in Black Space
title_sort response to asymmetrical violence in black space
topic Oakland
immigrant
space
Black geographies
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/14/1/33
work_keys_str_mv AT stephaniedjones theresponsetoasymmetricalviolenceinblackspace
AT stephaniedjones responsetoasymmetricalviolenceinblackspace