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Amelia Frank-Vitale

Assistant Professor Anthropology and International Affairs
E-mail:
afv@princeton.edu
Assistant:

Biography

I am an anthropologist of migration and violence in Central America and Mexico. For years, I was focused on documenting the dangers facing people migrating across Mexico and the strategies they developed – including coming together in caravans – to manage those risks and defy restrictions on movement. For my doctoral work, I shifted focus to Honduras, looking at how young people navigate life on the urban margins and what leads them to want to migrate. Drawing from this, my current book project, Leave If You Can: Honduran Migration And A New Era Of Deportation examines how Honduran youth navigate life after deportation, illuminating the changing nature of deportation as a consequence of the externalization of borders and connecting regimes of mobility control - and the creative ways people challenge them - across scale and space.

My work has been published in Geopolitics, the Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology, EntreDiversidades, Public Anthropologist, Medical Anthropology Quarterly, The Annals of Anthropological Practice, and Trends in Organized Crime. My commentary has also appeared in The Washington Post, Fortune Magazine, NACLA Report on the Americas, In These Times, Contra Corriente, and The World Policy Journal. I also co-founded and co-edit the "Regional Expert Paper Series," which seeks to make detailed knowledge from Central America openly accessible to journalists, policy makers, attorneys, and others interested in the region.