Executive Summary When nation-states have responded to increased migration by intensifying border enforcement, restricting immigrant rights, and closing paths to citizenship, cities have emerged as sanctuaries for displaced and marginalized populations. This article traces a historical pattern of urban refuge across three historical periods—late eighteenth-century Hamburg and Altona, mid-nineteenth-century Brussels, and contemporary Minneapolis—to argue that municipal hospitality constitutes a practical, if fragile, alternative framework for protecting the human rights of immigrants when national governments fail to do so. Drawing on Immanuel Kant’s cosmopolitan principle of universal hospitality and Eleanor Roosevelt’s call to ground human rights in “small places close to home,” the article demonstrates how cities have consistently extended informal citizenship—access to housing, employment, commerce, and community—to immigrants and refugees excluded from formal political membership in nation states. In the revolutionary 1790s, Hamburg and Altona, neutral port cities on the Elbe River, welcomed thousands of political émigrés and economic migrants under a civic republicanism that valued tolerance and trade. In Brussels between 1845 and 1848, constitutional guarantees of civil rights for all residents of the territory of Belgium opened access to a cosmopolitan refuge for radical exiles, including Karl Marx, even as neighboring empires pressured the federal government to expel them. In 2025–2026, the most recent case of Minneapolis demonstrates that decentralized, grassroots “neighboring”—mutual aid networks, rapid-response teams, food distribution, legal support, and solidarity protests—can mount a sustained challenge to aggressive federal immigration enforcement. The article situates this contemporary urban resistance within the broader theoretical debate over the asymmetry between emigration and immigration rights at an international level, and state sovereignty at a national level, and asks whether city-based informal citizenship can offer a stable, replicable foundation for immigration reform. The comparative historical analysis reveals both the resilience and the limits of municipal sanctuary: open-door policies in Hamburg and Brussels ultimately collapsed under Napoleon’s military occupation and diplomatic pressure from Austrian and Prussia, respectively. Nevertheless, the persistence of urban hospitality across two and a half centuries suggests that the city remains an indispensable arena for negotiating the tension between national sovereignty and human security, and a productive starting point for reimagining inclusive models of belonging.
Janet L. Polasky (Mon,) studied this question.