This two-part special issue spotlights empirical and theoretical articles on the racialization of migrants and migration. 1,2 These studies show how racialization is a dynamic process whereby "ideas about race are constructed, come to be regarded as meaningful, and are acted upon" (Murji and Solomos 2005: 1); and how migrants and migration are key sites to understand this complex and oftentimes contradictory process. These articles stem from a virtual conference held in December 2020 on racialization and migration organized by Kim Ebert and Wenjie Liao.The conference sought to bring together scholars who study how migrants are constructed and targeted as the "Other" and with what consequences, and how migrants and their allies confront and challenge these constructions. We found this line of research especially important in an era of global right-wing resurgence built on antiimmigration sentiments and actions. The conference participants comprised an interdisciplinary group of social scientists whose work complicated the existing literature on race, racialization, and migration in multiple ways, including incorporating an intersectional analytical lens as an alternative to traditional assimilationist approaches to migration research; de-centering the state in these analyses; focusing on alternative,