Making Sanctuary, Enacting Citizenship: Governing, Resisting, Imagining
Just Added

Making Sanctuary, Enacting Citizenship: Governing, Resisting, Imagining

By Giovanni Picker

Book discussion with Professor and author Rachel Humphris and Professor Engin Isin. All welcome!

Date and time

Location

Room 718, 42 Bute Gardens Building, University of Glasgow

42 Bute Gardens Glasgow G12 8RT United Kingdom

Good to know

Highlights

  • 1 hour 30 minutes
  • In person

About this event

Community • Other

Book conversation: Making Sanctuary Cities: Migration, Citizenship and Urban Governance (Stanford 2025)

Speakers

Professor Rachel Humphris (Queen Mary University of London) - Author

Professor Engin Isin (Queen Mary University of London) - Discussant

Venue

42, Bute Gardens Building, room 718


As authoritarian politics tighten their grip across the globe, from the assault on migrants in the US to the rapid expansion of deadly border regimes in Europe, the sanctuary city is often attacked as a site of resistance. Since the 1980s, when cities first pledged protection for people with precarious immigration status, sanctuary has been a rallying cry for those demanding dignity and belonging in the face of exclusionary nationalism. Yet sanctuary has also been contested and challenged. For some, it is a powerful tool against deportation and criminalisation. For others, it risks reproducing hierarchies, divides rather than builds solidarity, and shifts responsibility onto local authorities, narrowing the struggles for migrant justice.

In Making Sanctuary Cities (Stanford University Press, 2025), Rachel Humphris offers a rethinking of how citizenship is negotiated, resisted, and reimagined through sanctuary city movements. Based on long-term fieldwork in three pioneering sanctuary cities, San Francisco (USA), Sheffield (UK), and Toronto (Canada), Humphris traces how the sanctuary city plays out on the ground, and how its emancipatory promise often collides with the realities of governance.

This conversation between Professors Rachel Humphris and Engin Isin will grapple with the contradictions of sanctuary in an age of authoritarian resurgence. Together, they will ask: Can cities carve out spaces of belonging when national governments intensify deportation, dispossession, and exclusion? How do communities and activists fight for alternatives without being co-opted by the very systems they resist? And what radical possibilities for citizenship might emerge from these urban struggles?

Organised by

Giovanni Picker

Followers

--

Events

--

Hosting

--

Free
Oct 8 · 15:30 GMT+1