AbstractsPolitical Science

"Cuando Actuamos, Actuamos Juntos": Understanding the Intersections of Religion, Activism, and Citizenship within the Latino Community in Indianapolis

by Ryan Iffland Logan




Institution: IUPUI
Department:
Year: 2014
Keywords: citizenship; activism; undocumented migration; religion; social justice; Latino; race and ethnicity; Indianapolis Congregation Action Network; Christianity and justice  – Indiana  – Indianapolis; Immigrants  – Religious life  – Indiana  – Indianapolis; Social justice  – Indiana  – Indianapolis  – Religious aspects; Latin Americans  – Indiana  – Indianapolis  – Ethnic identity; Hispanic Americans  – Indiana  – Indianapolis  – Ethnic identity; Citizenship  – Social aspects  – Indiana  – Indianapolis; Religion and politics  – Indiana  – Indianapolis; Latin America  – Emigration and immigration; Emigration and immigration law  – United States; United States  – Race relations; Ethnicity  – Indiana  – Indianapolis; Indiana  – Race relations; Civil rights movements  – Indiana  – Indianapolis; Church and social problems  – Indiana  – Indianapolis; Intergroup relations; Latin Americans  – Indiana  – Indianapolis; Hispanic Americans  – Indiana  – Indianapolis; Latin Americans  – Indiana  – Indianapolis  – Politics and government; Hispanic Americans  – Indiana  – Indianapolis  – Politics and government; Political participation  – Indiana  – Indianapolis; United States  – Emigration and immigration  – Government policy; Political leadership  – Indiana  – Indianapolis
Record ID: 2026790
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/1805/5502


Abstract

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) Undocumented immigration from Latin America is a heated and divisive topic in United States' politics. Politicians in Washington, D.C. are debating new legislation which would provide a pathway to citizenship for some 11 million undocumented immigrants. While several federal immigration reform bills were debated in the early 2000s, each one failed in either the House of Representatives or in the Senate. The Indianapolis Congregation Action Network (IndyCAN), a grassroots activist group in Indianapolis, is organizing the Latino community through faith and shared political goals. Undocumented Latino immigrants are utilizing IndyCAN as a method to influence progressive policy change. However, anti-immigrant groups challenge these efforts by attempting to define who can be considered an "American" and are attempting to block legislation due to their negative perceptions of Latinos. Debates about citizenship have racial discourses and reveal the embeddedness of race and ethnicity. Despite this, many Latino immigrants are forging their own identities in the United States and are engaging in a political system that refuses to grant them a legal status. Through an enactment of activism called la fe en acción [faith in action], these immigrants ground their political organizing with IndyCAN and attempt to appeal to the religious faith of politicians. I explore issues of race, political engagement, and religion in the lives of Indianapolis’ Latino community. In this case study, I demonstrate that IndyCAN is acting as a vehicle through which undocumented Latino immigrants are engaging in the political process. This political involvement occurs through religious strategies that seem apolitical yet are implicitly an enactment of activism. Ultimately, I reveal how undocumented Latino immigrants in Indianapolis are impacting the political process regardless of their legal status.