"You have to take the children away."—Donald Trump
Taking Children argues that for four hundred years the United States has taken children for political ends. Black children, Native children, Latinx children, and the children of the poor have all been seized from their kin and caregivers. As Laura Briggs's sweeping narrative shows, the practice played out on the auction block, in the boarding schools designed to pacify the Native American population, in the foster care system used to put down the Black freedom movement, in the US's anti-Communist coups in Central America, and in the moral panic about "crack babies." In chilling detail we see how Central Americans were made into a population that could be stripped of their children and how every US administration beginning with Reagan has put children of immigrants and refugees in detention camps. Yet these tactics of terror have encountered opposition from every generation, and Briggs challenges us to stand and resist in this powerful corrective to American history.
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Taking Children offers an alarming new perspective on US child welfare policy as political state violence and dispels the still common and misguided view that it is a form of benevolent protection of children. Laura Briggs's framing of child removal as a repressive response to social movements and rebellions by oppressed people is especially enlightening."—Dorothy E. Roberts, author of
Shattered Bonds: The Color of Child Welfare "Sweeping through the hemisphere and the centuries, this book illuminates a dark thread that runs through our history. I hope it inspires people to break that thread forever."—Adam Hochschild, author of
Lessons from a Dark Time and Other Essays "The timeliness of this short but provocative book is chilling.
Taking Children could not be more relevant to our current political moment because it explores the dark but shockingly common practice of state terror over subjects who are so vulnerable that something as precious, personal, and intimate as their own children can be taken away from them. It is a well-researched book with heart, one that will inspire people in this generation to take a stand."—Jason Ruiz, author of
Americans in the Treasure House: Travel to Porfirian Mexico and the Cultural Politics of Empire "
Taking Children couldn't be more timely. With clear and razor-sharp analysis, Briggs's compelling book shows that the cruelty of Donald Trump's presidency has deep roots in US history, and that its most vicious effects have long been focused on families, on the taking of children of people of color and poor people. A damning tour du force."—Greg Grandin, author of
The End of the Myth: From the Frontier to the Border Wall in the Mind of America "
Taking Children is a powerful corrective to an amnesiac politics that makes the brutality of the present seem novel and abnormal. Briggs traces the history of family separation through immigration politics, mass incarceration, and anti-Communist dirty wars—and back further still, to slavery and the genocidal campaigns against Indigenous people. This is urgent reading that dispels the mistaken idea that Trump's barbarity is un-American.'"—Daniel Denvir, host of
The Dig and author of
All-American Nativism: How the Bipartisan War on Immigrants Explains Politics as We Know It
"A wide- ranging and uncomfortably revealing account of what might be called the tradition of family separation."