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The Sanctuary City: Immigrant, Refugee, and Receiving Communities in Postindustrial Philadelphia

The Sanctuary City: Immigrant, Refugee, and Receiving Communities in Postindustrial Philadelphia Journal of the American Planning Association 1 2023 | Volume 0 Number 0 Reviews and refugees’ divergent experiences of work, housing, The Sanctuary City: Immigrant, neighborhoods, and legal contexts of reception. Each Refugee, and Receiving Communities chapter also chronicles the development of civil society, in Postindustrial Philadelphia highlighting the work of established voluntary organiza- tions that resettle migrants and refugees and the numerous organizations that immigrants and refugees Domenic Vitiello eventually created to help themselves. (2022). Cornell University Press, 292 pages. $26.95 (paperback) Each group that Vitiello features could easily merit or open-access (e-book) Reviewed by Amada Armenta, University of California, an entire book, so the breadth of information that The Los Angeles Sanctuary City provides about Philadelphia’s multiple immigrant communities is truly extraordinary. As a quali- n the United States, tative sociologist, I would have loved it if Vitiello had cities like Philadelphia spent more time discussing his research methods and (PA) have declared data, particularly because this research draws from an themselves sanctuary impressive 150 interviews! This quibble aside, by using cities, adopting policies each migrant/refugee group as a case study, the book that protect undocu- brings the similarities and differences between them mented immigrants and into http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of the American Planning Association Taylor & Francis

The Sanctuary City: Immigrant, Refugee, and Receiving Communities in Postindustrial Philadelphia

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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2023 American Planning Association, Chicago, IL.
ISSN
1939-0130
eISSN
0194-4363
DOI
10.1080/01944363.2023.2198928
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Journal of the American Planning Association 1 2023 | Volume 0 Number 0 Reviews and refugees’ divergent experiences of work, housing, The Sanctuary City: Immigrant, neighborhoods, and legal contexts of reception. Each Refugee, and Receiving Communities chapter also chronicles the development of civil society, in Postindustrial Philadelphia highlighting the work of established voluntary organiza- tions that resettle migrants and refugees and the numerous organizations that immigrants and refugees Domenic Vitiello eventually created to help themselves. (2022). Cornell University Press, 292 pages. $26.95 (paperback) Each group that Vitiello features could easily merit or open-access (e-book) Reviewed by Amada Armenta, University of California, an entire book, so the breadth of information that The Los Angeles Sanctuary City provides about Philadelphia’s multiple immigrant communities is truly extraordinary. As a quali- n the United States, tative sociologist, I would have loved it if Vitiello had cities like Philadelphia spent more time discussing his research methods and (PA) have declared data, particularly because this research draws from an themselves sanctuary impressive 150 interviews! This quibble aside, by using cities, adopting policies each migrant/refugee group as a case study, the book that protect undocu- brings the similarities and differences between them mented immigrants and into

Journal

Journal of the American Planning AssociationTaylor & Francis

Published: Oct 2, 2023

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