Professor Jennifer Koh, "Immigration from a Christian Perspective: The Challenge and Imperative of Racial Justice" -- Political Theology
Professor Jennifer Lee Koh's essay, "Immigration from a Christian Perspective: The Challenge and Imperative of Racial Justice," is published in Political Theology. The article considers the need for a faith-informed perspective on immigration for Christian audiences.
Abstract of "Immigration from a Christian Perspective: The Challenge and Imperative of Racial Justice"
This Essay seeks to encourage Christians – especially those working communities who identify with or are perceived as evangelical – who speak and advocate for greater humanity in immigration to engage more deeply with the interconnectedness of racial justice and immigration law and policy today. Framing a self-consciously Christian approach to immigration to include concerns about racial justice raises challenges related to the fraught nature of both immigration and racial discourse during an era of deep politicization and polarization. But positive practical effects might also follow from such engagement, such as enhancing Christian communities’ ability to ameliorate the harms imposed by contemporary immigration enforcement on people of color, bringing Christians into greater proximity with the concerns animating movements for immigrant and racial justice, and theological enrichment around faith-based discourse regarding immigration.
The complete article may be found at Political Theology