“Is It Because We Are Negroes?”: Haitian Refugees, Racialized Detention, and Anticolonialism in Puerto Rico
- Thursday, 9 July 2026, 18:15
- HCA, Atrium
- Dr. Fabio Santos, University of Copenhagen (Denmark)
This talk takes as its point of departure a question posed by Haitian women asylum seekers detained in Puerto Rico in the early 1980s: “Is it because we are Negroes?” Their query exposes the racialized foundations of U.S. refugee policy, while their confinement at Fort Allen, a U.S. military base on the still-colonial territory of Puerto Rico, reveals the entanglements of migration control, empire, and racial exclusion. Haiti – the site of the first and only successful self-liberation of the enslaved – has been systematically marginalized, isolated, and impoverished ever since, leaving precarious flight as one of the few avenues of survival, though it often results in the opposite: social or literal death. By situating Fort Allen within a longer history of U.S. and European colonialism in the Caribbean, this talk excavates the colonial and anti-colonial logics that have shaped and contested refugee detention, showing how contemporary practices of offshoring racialized “Others” and the struggles against them across the world are far from new.

Address
Heidelberg Center for American Studies
HCA Atrium
Curt und Heidemarie Engelhorn Palais
Hauptstraße 120
69117 HeidelbergOrganizer
Event Type
Talk
Contact
Migration research rarely engages the Caribbean or historical trajectories beyond the policy priorities of the global North. Revisiting this case highlights how the colonial and racial logics structuring refugee detention in the early 1980s have deep historical roots and, at the same time, anticipate ongoing dynamics, as Haitians continue to be among the most targeted migrant groups in the United States and beyond today.
All Dates of the Event 'Migrations and the Americas'
Migration movements turn out to be a particular global challenge of the twenty-first century in many regions of the world. The HCA addresses this topic together with the Heidelberg Center for Ibero-American Studies and the Institute of Geography with the lecture series “Migration and the Americas,” with a special focus on the United States and Latin America.
Jun.-Prof. Dr. Yaatsil Guevara GonzálezProf. Dr. Ulrike Gerhard