This issue’s feature explores, documents, and critiques some of the spaces found throughout the migration process. It asks what it means to be displaced from home, to persevere en route, and to arrive elsewhere. Contributors describe displacements as three American cities cater to infl uxes of young, wealthy white people. They conceptualize architectures of those who can no longer build in places of their own. They survey precarious journeys through squats, camps, and detention centers. And they identify welcoming and unwelcoming spaces for migrants upon arrival in Europe and North America.
Jescelle Major, Jeffrey Karl Ochsner, Britton Shepard, Charles Tonderai Mudede, Gregory T. Woolstone, Maurice Carlos Ruffin, Erin McElroy, Sai Sinbondit, Saba Innab, Katja Ulbert, Laura Doggett, Tings Chak, Reena Saini Kallat, Laura M. Pana, Shaolu Yu, Davida Ingram, Claudia Castro Luna, Chad P. Hall, Karin Cheng, Build llc., Callie Neylan, John Parman
Edited by Gregory T. Woolston. Design by Lucia Marquand.