New Books Network

Amelia Frank-Vitale, "Leave If You Can: Migration and Violence in Bordered Worlds" (U California Press, 2026)

Apr 2, 2026
Amelia Frank-Vitale, Assistant Professor of Anthropology and International Affairs at Princeton who followed Honduran migrants and caravans, discusses border enforcement, invisible gangland neighborhood borders, and how deportation and policy fuel repeated movement. She also explores migrant caravans as both protest and practical tactic, and critiques short-term aid amid structural pressures.
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ANECDOTE

Oaxaca Shelter Sparked A Research Focus

  • Amelia first encountered Central American migrants while volunteering at an Oaxaca shelter around 2010.
  • That experience reignited her commitment to study migration, shaping her trajectory from organizing to academic research.
INSIGHT

Book Written For Scholars And Everyday Advocates

  • The book aims to reach scholars and everyday readers like teachers to explain why Hondurans migrate.
  • Frank Vitale hopes her work helps immigration attorneys, judges, and teachers contextualize students' or clients' migration experiences.
INSIGHT

Gang Borders Operate Like National Borders

  • Urban gang borders in San Pedro Sula function like invisible national borders that control residents' mobility.
  • Amelia Frank Vitale describes speed bumps and neighborhood lines called fronteras internas that are enforced as zones of surveillance and death for young men.
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