Sabine F CadeauMore Than a Massacre
Racial Violence and Citizenship in the Haitian-Dominican Borderlands
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Sabine F. Cadeau is a research fellow for the Legacies of Enslavement project at the University of Cambridge. A historian of Latin America, the Caribbean and the African diaspora, her research has been supported by the Andrew Mellon Foundation and the Woodrow Wilson Foundation.
Introduction; 1. From natives to foreigners: Executive Order 372 and the
origins of denationalization; 2. The end of the old border: Ethnic
profiling, discrimination, and arrests in the Dominican border provinces,
1920-1936; 3. Curses, scuffles, and public disturbances: Eruptions of
popular racism in the premassacre border region; 4. "They killed my entire
family": The 1937 genocide; 5. "La campaña contra los haitianos":
Round-ups, concealment, and the plan behind the 1937 genocide; 6. The
"Dominicanization" of the border; 7. Refugees and land conflict in the
postgenocide Haitian-Dominican border region; Epilogue: The right to have
rights: Migration, race, and citizenship in the Dominican Republic;
Appendix: Photographs.