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[link removed] Forward ([link removed])
** Immigration Reading, 10/3/19
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Support the Center for Immigration Studies by donating on line here: [link removed] ([link removed])
ATTN Federal employees: The Center's Combined Federal Campaign number is 10298.
GOVERNMENT DOCUMENTS
1. (#1) State Department immigrant visas by post, August 2019
2. (#2) DHS fact sheet on migration accords with C. American countries
3. (#3) DHS OIG report on investigation of immigration law violations by CBP personnel
4. (#4) GAO report on fraud risks in program to protect foreign victims of domestic abuse
5. (#5) U.S. District Court order in Make the Road New York, et al. v. McAleenan
6. (#6) House testimony on expansion of detention by ICE
7. (#7) House testimony on oversight of ICE detention facilities
8. (#8) Senate testimony on U.S. policy in Mexico and Central America in addressing the crisis at the border
9. (#9) House testimony on the impact of reducing foreign assistance to Central America
10. (#10) Canada: Population estimates
11. (#11) Australia: Population statistics
12. (#12) N.Z.: Population statistics per the national census
REPORTS, ARTICLES, ETC.
13. (#13) Heritage Foundation report: "The Supreme Court Goes to War"
14. (#14) FAIR report on the number of illegal aliens living in the U.S.
15. (#15) Pew Research Center report on key facts about refugees to the U.S.
16. (#16) Three new reports and features from the Migration Policy Institute
17. (#17) New discussion paper from the Institute for the Study of Labor
18. (#18) Eight new papers from the Social Science Research Network
19. (#19) Eighteen new postings from the Immigration Law Professors' Blog
20. (#20) U.K. Three new reports from the Oxford Refugee Studies Centre
21. (#21) Report on expanding eligibility for professional and occupational licensing for immigrants
22. (#22) Report on detained immigrants and access to counsel in Pennsylvania
23. (#23) Report on civil rights and voting rights implications of the backlog in citizenship and naturalization applications
BOOKS
24. (#24) Re-thinking the Political Economy of Immigration Control: A Comparative Analysis
25. (#25) Migration
26. (#26) The Guarded Gate: Bigotry, Eugenics, and the Law That Kept Two Generations of Jews, Italians, and Other European Immigrants Out of America
27. (#27) Border Wars: Inside Trump's Assault on Immigration
28. (#28) The Windrush Betrayal: Exposing the Hostile Environment
JOURNALS
29. (#29) Anti Trafficking Review
30. (#30) Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
31. (#31) Journal of Ethnic and Racial Studies
32. (#32) REMHU
Immigrant Visas by Post, August 2019
U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Consular Affairs
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Fact Sheet: DHS Agreements with Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador
Department of Homeland Security, October 3, 2019
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Investigation of Alleged Violations of Immigration Laws at the Tecate, California, Port of Entry by U.S. Customs and Border Protection Personnel
DHS OIG-19-65, September 26, 2019
[link removed]
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New from the General Accountability Office
Immigration Benefits: Additional Actions Needed to Address Fraud Risks in Program for Foreign National Victims of Domestic Abuse
GAO-19-676, September 30, 2019
Report: [link removed]
Highlights: [link removed]
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Make the Road New York, et al. v. Kevin McAleenan
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, No. 19-cv-2369 (KBJ)
September 27, 2019
[link removed]
ORDERED that Defendants are PRELIMINARILY ENJOINED from enforcing the policy change that Acting Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Kevin McAleenan implemented in the Notice filed in the Federal Register on July 23, 2019.
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Thursday, September 26, 2019
House Committee on the Judiciary
Subcommittee on Immigration and Citizenship
[link removed]
The Expansion and Troubling Use of ICE Detention
Witness testimony:
Selene Saavedra Roman
College Station, TX
[link removed]
Denis Davydov
San Jose, CA
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Blanche Ornella Engochan
Silver Spring, MD
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Heidi Altman
Director of Policy, National Immigrant Justice Center
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Jorge Baron
Executive Director, Northwest Immigrant Rights Project
[link removed]
Melanie Schikore
Executive Director, Interfaith Community for Detained Immigrants
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Thomas D. Homan
Former Acting Director, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
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Charles A. Jenkins
Sheriff, Frederick County Sheriff's Office
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Thursday, September 26, 2019
House Committee on Homeland Security
Subcommittee on Oversight, Management, & Accountability
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Oversight of ICE Detention Facilities: Is DHS Doing Enough?
Committee Chairman statement:
Bennie G. Thompson
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Subcommittee Chairwoman statement:
Xochitl Torres Small
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Witness testimony:
Jenni Nakamoto, President, The Nakamoto Group, LLC
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Katherine Hawkins, Senior Legal Analyst, Constitution Project, Project on Government Oversight
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Diana Shaw, Assistant Inspector General for Special Reviews and Evaluations, Office of Inspector General, Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
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Peter Mina, Deputy Officer for Programs and Compliance, Office of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, DHS
Tae Johnson, Assistant Director, Custody Management, Enforcement and Removal Operations, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, DHS
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Wednesday, September 25, 2019
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
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U.S. Policy in Mexico and Central America: Ensuring Effective Policies to Address the Crisis at the Border
Witness testimony:
Kirsten D. Madison
Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
United States Department of State
[link removed]
Michael G. Kozak
Acting Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs
United States Department of State
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Wednesday, September 25, 2019
House Committee on Foreign Affairs
Subcommittee on Western Hemisphere, Civilian Security, and Trade
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Assessing the Impact of Cutting Foreign Assistance to Central America
Witness testimony:
Stephen McFarland
Former U.S. Ambassador to Guatemala
[link removed]
Juan González
Associate Vice President, The Cohen Group
Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs
Rick Jones
Senior Technical Advisor for Latin America, Catholic Relief Services
Matthew Rooney
Managing Director, Bush Institute-SMU Economic Growth Initiative, The George W. Bush Institute
[link removed]
Video of hearing: [link removed]
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Canada's population estimates: Age and sex, July 1, 2019
Statistics Canada, September 30, 2019
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Excerpt:
Canada posts the largest annual population increase in numbers
Canada's population was estimated at 37,589,262 on July 1, 2019, up 531,497 compared with July 1, 2018. Such an annual increase in the number of people living in the country is the highest ever observed. This growth also corresponds to adding just over one person every minute.
. . .
Permanent and temporary immigration accelerating growth
Canada's sustained population growth is driven mostly (82.2%) by the arrival of a large number of immigrants and non-permanent residents. The difference between births and deaths accounted for a small portion (17.8%) of the growth, a share that is decreasing year after year.
Canada admitted 313,580 immigrants in 2018/2019, one of the highest levels in Canadian history. In 2015/2016, Canada received 323,192 permanent immigrants, including nearly 30,000 Syrian refugees.
The number of non-permanent residents rose by 171,536 in 2018/2019, the largest increase in the country's history. While also fuelled by rapid growth in asylum claimants, this gain was mainly led by an increase in the number of work and study permit holders. Temporary immigration assists Canada in meeting its labour market needs.
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Australia's population grew by 1.6 per cent
Australian Bureau of Statistics, September 19, 2019
[link removed]
Excerpt:
Australia's population grew by 1.6 per cent during the year ending 31 March 2019, according to the latest figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).
ABS Demography Director Beidar Cho said: "The population at 31 March 2019 was 25.3 million people, following an annual increase of 388,800 people."
Natural increase accounted for 35.8 per cent of annual population growth, while net overseas migration accounted for the remaining 64.2 per cent.
There were 298,100 births and 159,100 deaths registered in Australia during the year ending 31 March 2019. Natural increase during this period was 139,100 people, down 2.2 per cent from the previous year.
There were 534,700 overseas migration arrivals and 285,100 departures during the year ending 31 March 2019, resulting in net overseas migration of 249,700 people. Net overseas migration was up 4.9 per cent compared to the previous year.
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2018 Census population and dwelling counts
Statistics New Zealand, September 22, 2019
[link removed]
Excerpt:
Results of the 2018 Census showed:
The 2018 Census usually resident population count was 4,699,755 – up 457,707 from the 2013 Census (4,242,048).
On average, the population grew by about 2.1 percent a year since the 2013 Census – significantly higher than the annual average growth between 2006 and 2013 (0.7 percent). The higher growth rate is consistent with higher net migration (259,000 in the five years ended 30 June 2018 compared with 59,000 in the seven years ended 30 June 2013).
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The Supreme Court Goes to War
By Edwin Meese III and Charles Stimson
The Heritage Foundation, September 24, 2019
[link removed]
Excerpt:
Immigration and National Security
Another aspect of judicial involvement in national security involves the issue of immigration, and in particular the travel ban cases during the Trump Administration. The President’s executive order included a finding that immigrant and nonimmigrant entry into the United States by aliens from seven countries “would be detrimental to the interests of the United States” and ordered suspension of entry for nationals from those countries for 90 days. It also directed the Secretary of State to suspend the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program for 120 days (with exceptions on a case-by-case basis) and suspended indefinitely the entry of Syrian refugees.
Traditionally, immigration policy is an area in which both the Supreme Court and inferior courts have held that the courts must defer to the political judgment of the President and Congress. Courts have distinguished between two groups of aliens: those who are present within our borders and those seeking admission.
After proceedings in the courts, and despite a revised executive order, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals essentially struck down President Trump’s travel ban. However, as 9th Circuit Court Judge Jay Bybee made clear in a dissent from the denial of reconsideration en banc, which was joined by four other judges, the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 delegated authority to the President to suspend entry of “any class of aliens” as he deems appropriate. It reads in part:
Whenever the President finds that the entry of any class of aliens into the United States would be detrimental to the interests of the United States, he may by proclamation, and for such period as he shall deem necessary, suspend the entry of all aliens or any class of aliens as immigrants or nonimmigrants, or impose on the entry any restrictions he may deem appropriate.
Bybee made clear that the “appropriate test for judging executive and congressional action affecting aliens who are outside our borders and seeking admission is set forth in Kleindienst v. Mandel.” In Mandel, the government denied a visa to a Marxist journalist who had been invited to address conferences at some universities in the United States. The Supreme Court found that Mandel was “an unadmitted and nonresident alien, [who] had no constitutional right of entry,” and declined to revisit the principle that the political branches may decide whom to admit and whom to exclude. Despite the logical relevance of this case law, the ruling of the panel of the 9th Circuit gave short shrift to Mandel because it “involved only a decision by a consular officer, not the President.”
After pointing out the absurdity of giving deference to a consular officer yet none to the President, the dissenters also pointed out how the panel ignored the Supreme Court’s decisions in Fiallo v Bell and Kerry v Din and even prior 9th Circuit precedent. Bybee concluded: “It is our duty to say what the law is; and the meta-source of our law, the U.S. Constitution, commits the power to make foreign policy, including the decisions to permit or forbid entry into the United States, to the President and Congress.”
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How Many Illegal Aliens Live in the United States?
By Matt O’Brien, Spencer Raley, and Casey Ryan
Federation for American Immigration Reform, September 2019
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Key facts about refugees to the U.S.
By Jens Manuel Krogstad
Pew Research Center Fact Tank, September 27, 2019
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New from the Migration Policy Institute
Investing in the Neighborhood: Changing Mexico-U.S. Migration Patterns and Opportunities for Sustainable Cooperation
By Andrew Selee, Silvia E. Giorguli-Saucedo, Ariel G. Ruiz Soto, and Claudia Masferrer
September 2019
[link removed]
Supreme Court Asylum Ruling Latest Sign Judiciary Is Not the Brake on the Trump Administration that Immigration-Rights Activists Sought
By Muzaffar Chishti and Jessica Bolter
Migration Information Source Policy Beat, September 25, 2019
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On the Brink: Prospects for UK Nationals in the EU-27 after a No-Deal Brexit
By Meghan Benton and Aliyyah Ahad
MPI Policy Brief, September 2019
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New from the Institute for the Study of Labor
Conflicting Identities: Cosmopolitan or Anxious? Appreciating Concerns of Host Country Population Improves Attitudes Towards Immigrants
By Tobias Stöhr and Philipp Wichardt
IZA Discussion Paper No. 12630, September 2019
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New from the Social Science Research Network
1. Alienating Citizens
By Amanda Frost, American University Washington College of Law
Northwestern University Law Review, Vol. 114, No. 1, 2019
[link removed]
2. Taking Liberty Decisions Away from 'Imitation Judges'
By Mary Holper, Boston College Law School
Posted: October 1, 2019
[link removed]
3. Sanctuary, Civil Disobedience, and Jewish Law
By Jonathan Zasloff
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) School of Law
UCLA School of Law, Public Law Research Paper No. 19-32
[link removed]
4. Brexit’s Effect on Citizens, Human Rights & Immigration
By Michaela Benson, City University London, The City Law School, et al.
City Law School Working Paper Series 2019/03
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5. 'Descended from Immigrants and Revolutionists': How Family Immigration History Shapes Representation in Congress
By James Feigenbaum, Boston University Department of Economics; Maxwell Palmer, Boston University Department of Political Science; and Benjamin Schneer Harvard University
HKS Working Paper No. RWP19-028, September 2019
[link removed]
6. Improving Immigration Adjudications Through Competent Counsel
By Andrew I. Schoenholtz, Georgetown University Law Center and Hamutal Bernstein, Independent
Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics, Vol. 21, No. 1, 2008
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7. Sanctuary City and Crime
By Yuki Otsu, Washington University in St. Louis Department of Economics
Posted: September 23, 2019
[link removed]
8. The Vacancies Act and a Post-Vacancy First Assistant of USCIS
By Stephen Migala
Posted: September 20, 2019
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Latest posts from the Immigration Law Professors' Blog
1. US Government to Collect DNA from Detained Immigrants
October 3, 2019
[link removed]
2. Behind Closed Doors: Inside the Trump Administration's Immigration Bureaucracy
October 2, 2019
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3. Immigration Article of the Day: Is the Rescission of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) Justified by the Results of Cost-Benefit Analysis
By Carolina Arlota
October 1, 2019
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4. ACS data shows declining population growth from immigration to US
October 1, 2019
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5. ICE courthouse arrests challenged in NY
October 1, 2019
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6. The Interior Structure of Immigration Enforcement
By Eisha Jain
September 30, 2019
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7. The Trump Administration Continues to War with "Sanctuary Jurisdictions"
September 27, 2019
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8. Trump administration sets lowest cap on refugee admissions in four decades. Again.
September 27, 2019
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9. Trump Administration Agrees to Asylum Deal with Honduras
September 26, 2019
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10. US Move Puts More Asylum Seekers at Risk Expanded ‘Remain in Mexico’ Program Undermines Due Process
September 25, 2019
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11. Where asylum-seekers come from
Here is an interesting table from The Conversation.
September 24, 2019
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12. Trump Administration To End "Catch And Release" Immigration Policy, Says DHS Chief
September 24, 2019
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13. Immigration Article of the Day: The Movement to Decriminalize Border Crossing
By Ingrid Eagly
September 24, 2019
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14. Migration Agreement Between the U.S. Government and the Government of El Salvador
September 21, 2019
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15. Guest Post: The Supreme Court Failed Us on September 11th
By Geoffrey A. Hoffman
September 20, 2019
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16. Jodi Goodwin Exposes Realities of Remain in Mexico: Part 2
September 20, 2019
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17. Immigration Article of the Day: The Mythology of Sanctuary Cities
By Kit Johnson
September 20, 2019
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18. USCIS to Resume Individualized Processing of Deferred Action Requests
September 19, 2019
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New from the Oxford Refugee Studies Centre
Avoiding refugee status and alternatives to asylum
By Georgia Cole
RSC Research in Brief 14, September 30, 2019
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Integration of resettled Syrian refugees in Oxford: preliminary study in 2018
By Naohiko Omata and Dunya Habash, with Nuha Abdo
RSC Working Paper Series, 129, September 27, 2019
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Some other(ed) 'refugees'?: women seeking asylum under refugee and human rights law
By Catherine Briddick
Research Handbook on International Refugee Law, pp. 281-294, 2019; September 27, 2019
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Expanding Eligibility for Professional and Occupational Licensing for Immigrants
Niskanen Center, September 2019
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Detained Immigrants and Access to Counsel in Pennsylvania
Penn State Law Center for Immigrants’ Rights Clinic, October 2019
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Citizenship Delayed: Civil Rights and Voting Rights Implications of the Backlog in Citizenship and Naturalization Applications
Colorado State Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, September 2019
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Re-thinking the Political Economy of Immigration Control: A Comparative Analysis
By Lea Sitkin
Routledge, 244 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 1138121576, $131.67
[link removed]
Kindle, 1184 KB, ASIN: B07H4XSBJK, $49.95
Book Description: This book offers a systematic exploration of the changing politics around immigration and the impact of resultant policy regimes on immigrant communities. It does so across a uniquely wide range of policy areas: immigration admissions, citizenship, internal immigration controls, labour market regulation, the welfare state and the criminal justice system. Challenging the current state of theoretical literature on the ‘criminalisation’ or ‘marginalisation’ of immigrants, this book examines the ways in which immigrants are treated differently in different national contexts, as well as the institutional factors driving this variation. To this end, it offers data on overall trends across 20 high-income countries, as well as more detailed case studies on the UK, Australia, the USA, Germany, Italy and Sweden. At the same time, it charts an emerging common regime of exploitation, which threatens the depiction of some countries as more inclusionary than others.
The politicisation of immigration has intensified the challenge for policy-makers, who today must respond to populist calls for restrictive immigration policy whilst simultaneously heeding business groups’ calls for cheap labour and respecting legal obligations that require more liberal and welcoming policy regimes. The resultant policy regimes often have counterproductive effects, in many cases marginalising immigrant communities and contributing to the growth of underground and criminal economies. Finally, developments on the horizon, driven by technological progress, threaten to intensify distributional challenges. While these will make the politics around immigration even more fraught in coming decades, the real issue is not immigration but the loss of good jobs, which will have serious implications across all Western countries.
This book will appeal to scholars and students of criminology, social policy, political economy, political sociology, the sociology of immigration and race, and migration studies.
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Migration
By Robin Cohen
Andre Deutsch Ltd, 224 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 0233005978, $21.21
[link removed]
Book Description: While recognizing that distinctions between categories are often fuzzy, Migration covers many types of migrants including explorers, slaves, pilgrims, mineworkers, labourers, exiles, refugees, sex workers, students, tourists, retirees and expatriates. Cohen covers a long span of history and many regions and themes, giving context and colour to one of the most pressing issues of our time. The text is supplemented by a series of vivid maps, evocative photographs and powerful graphics. Migration is present at the dawn of human history - the phenomena of hunting and gathering, seeking seasonal pasture and nomadism being as old as human social organization itself. The flight from natural disasters, adverse climatic changes, famine, and territorial aggression by other communities or other species were also common occurrences. But if migration is as old as the hills, why is it now so politically sensitive? Why do migrants leave? Where do they go, in what numbers and for what
reasons? Do migrants represent a threat to the social and political order? Are they none-the-less necessary to provide labour, develop their home countries, increase consumer demand and generate wealth? Can migration be stopped? All these questions are probed in an authoritative text by one of Britain's leading migration scholars.
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The Guarded Gate: Bigotry, Eugenics, and the Law That Kept Two Generations of Jews, Italians, and Other European Immigrants Out of America
By Daniel Okrent
Scribner, 496 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 1476798036, $22.30
[link removed]
Kindle, 53142 KB, ASIN: B07MKDJP4Z, 497 pp., $14.99
Book Description: A forgotten, dark chapter of American history with implications for the current day, The Guarded Gate tells the story of the scientists who argued that certain nationalities were inherently inferior, providing the intellectual justification for the harshest immigration law in American history. Brandished by the upper class Bostonians and New Yorkers—many of them progressives—who led the anti-immigration movement, the eugenic arguments helped keep hundreds of thousands of Jews, Italians, and other unwanted groups out of the US for more than 40 years.
Over five years in the writing, The Guarded Gate tells the complete story from its beginning in 1895, when Henry Cabot Lodge and other Boston Brahmins launched their anti-immigrant campaign. In 1921, Vice President Calvin Coolidge declared that “biological laws” had proven the inferiority of southern and eastern Europeans; the restrictive law was enacted three years later. In his characteristic style, both lively and authoritative, Okrent brings to life the rich cast of characters from this time, including Lodge’s closest friend, Theodore Roosevelt; Charles Darwin’s first cousin, Francis Galton, the idiosyncratic polymath who gave life to eugenics; the fabulously wealthy and profoundly bigoted Madison Grant, founder of the Bronx Zoo, and his best friend, H. Fairfield Osborn, director of the American Museum of Natural History; Margaret Sanger, who saw eugenics as a sensible adjunct to her birth control campaign; and Maxwell Perkins, the celebrated editor of Hemingway and Fitzgerald. A work
of history relevant for today, The Guarded Gate is an important, insightful tale that painstakingly connects the American eugenicists to the rise of Nazism, and shows how their beliefs found fertile soil in the minds of citizens and leaders both here and abroad.
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Border Wars: Inside Trump's Assault on Immigration
By Julie Hirschfeld Davis and Michael D. Shear
Simon & Schuster, 480 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 1982117397, $28.00
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Paperback, ISBN: 1982135778, 320 pp., $18.00
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Kindle, ASIN: B07P5GVZGK, $14.99
Book Description: As his campaign rhetoric in the 2018 midterms demonstrated, no issue matters more to Donald Trump than immigration. And no issue—with the possible exception of his opposition to Robert Mueller’s investigation of his 2016 campaign—better defines his administration.
Julie Hirschfeld Davis and Michael D. Shear have covered the Trump administration from its earliest days. In Border Wars, they take readers inside the White House to document how Trump and his allies blocked asylum-seekers and refugees, separated families, threatened deportation and sought to erode the longstanding bipartisan consensus that immigration and immigrants make positive contributions to America.
As the authors reveal, Trump has used immigration to stoke fears (“the caravan”), attack Democrats and the courts, and distract from negative news and political difficulties. Even as illegal immigration has fallen in recent years, Trump has elevated it in the imaginations of many Americans into a national crisis. Moreover, his comments about legal immigrants—Nigerians in their “huts,” Haitians infected with AIDS, and people from “@#$%hole countries”—have been incendiary.
Border Wars identifies the players behind Trump’s anti-immigration policies, showing how they planned, stumbled, and fought their way toward major immigration changes that have further polarized the nation. This definitive, behind-the-scenes account is filled with previously unreported stories that reveal how Trump’s decision-making is driven by gut instinct and marked by disorganization, paranoia, and a constantly feuding staff.
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The Windrush Betrayal: Exposing the Hostile Environment
By Amelia Gentleman
Guardian Faber Publishing, 384 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 1783351845, $20.03
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Book Description: Paulette Wilson had always assumed she was British. She had spent most of her life in London working as a cook; she even worked in the House of Commons’ canteen. How could someone who had lived in England since being a primary school pupil suddenly be classified as an illegal immigrant? It was only through Amelia Gentleman’s tenacious investigative and campaigning journalism that it emerged that thousands were in Paulette’s position. What united them was that they had all arrived in the UK from the Commonwealth as children in the 1950s and 1960s. In The Windrush Betrayal, Gentleman tells the story of the scandal and exposes deeply disturbing truths about modern Britain.
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Anti Trafficking Review
No. 13, September 2019
[link removed]
Selected articles:
Thematic Articles: Public Perceptions and Responses to Human Trafficking
Debunking the Myth of ‘Super Bowl Sex Trafficking’: Media hype or evidenced-based coverage
By Lauren Martin and Annie Hill
Public Understanding of Trafficking in Human Beings in Great Britain, Hungary and Ukraine
By Kiril Sharapov
‘Killing the Tree by Cutting the Foliage Instead of Uprooting It?’ Rethinking awareness campaigns as a response to trafficking in SouthWest Nigeria
By Peter Olayiwola
Introducing the Slave Next Door
By Jen Birks and Alison Gardner
Virtual Saviours: Digital games and antitrafficking awareness-raising
By Erin O’Brien and Helen Berents
The Quest to End Modern Slavery: Metaphors in corporate modern slavery statements
By Ilse A. Ras and Christiana Gregoriou
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Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Vol. 45, No. 14, November 2019
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Articles:
Special Issue 1: Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals through the Gender, Migration and Development Nexus
Achieving the sustainable development goals: surfacing the role for a gender analytic of migration
By Jenna Holliday, Jenna Hennebry, and Sarah Gammage
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International nurse migration from India and the Philippines: the challenge of meeting the sustainable development goals in training, orderly migration and healthcare worker retention
By Maddy Thompson and Margaret Walton-Roberts
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Gender, migration and care deficits: what role for the sustainable development goals?
By Sarah Gammage and Natacha Stevanovic
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Not without them: realising the sustainable development goals for women migrant workers
By Jenna Hennebry, KC Hari, and Nicola Piper
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Special Issue 2: The Making and Unmaking of Precarious, Ideal Subjects – Migration Brokerage in the Global South
The making and unmaking of precarious, ideal subjects – migration brokerage in the Global South
By Priya Deshingkar
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Please, thank you and sorry – brokering migration and constructing identities for domestic work in Ghana
By Mariama Awumbila, Priya Deshingkar, Leander Kandilige, Joseph Kofi Teye, and Mary Setrana
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Chutes-and-ladders: the migration industry, conditionality, and the production of precarity among migrant domestic workers in Singapore
By Kellynn Wee, Charmian Goh, and Brenda S.A. Yeoh
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What is a legitimate mobility manager? Juxtaposing migration brokers with the EU
By L. Akesson and J. Alpes
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Labour migration brokerage and Dalit politics in Andhra Pradesh: a Dalit fabric of labour circulation
By David Picherit
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Producing ideal Bangladeshi migrants for precarious construction work in Qatar
By Priya Deshingkar, C.R. Abrar, Mirza Taslima Sultana, Kazi Nurmohammad Hossainul Haque, and Md Selim Reza
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Journal of Ethnic and Racial Studies
Vol. 42, No. 16, November 2019
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Selected articles:
The happiness of European Muslims post-9/11
By Aslan Zorlu and Paul Frijters
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Unmaking citizens: passport removals, pre-emptive policing and the reimagining of colonial governmentalities
By Nisha Kapoor and Kasia Narkowicz
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Double standards? Attitudes towards immigrant and emigrant dual citizenship in the Netherlands
By Maarten Vink, Hans Schmeets, and Hester Mennes
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Contesting the deportation state? Political change aspirations in protests against forced returns
By Leila Hadj Abdou and Sieglinde Rosenberger
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The role of country of origin engagement in second-language proficiency of recent migrants
By Nella Geurts and Marcel Lubbers
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Ethnic niche formation at the top? Second-generation immigrants in Norwegian high-status occupations
By Arnfinn H. Midtboen and Marjan Nadim
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Taste or statistics? A correspondence study of ethnic, racial and religious labour market discrimination in Germany
By Ruud Koopmans, Susanne Veit, and Ruta Yemane
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Vol. 42, No. 15, October 2019
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Selected articles:
The double bind of DACA: exploring the legal violence of liminal status for undocumented youth
By Benjamin J. Roth
[link removed] ([link removed]) 90
Localizing ethnic entrepreneurship: “Chinese” chips shops in Belgium, “traditional” food culture, and transnational migration in Europe
By Els van Dongen
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Veiled Muslim women’s views on law banning the wearing of the niqab (face veil) in public
By Irene Zempi
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Perceived religious discrimination and confidence in Canadian institutions
By Maryam Dilmaghani
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“It was the photograph of the little boy”: reflections on the Syrian Vulnerable Persons Resettlement Programme in the UK
By Heidi Armbruster
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Welfare micropublics and inequality: urban super-diversity in a time of austerity
By Mette Louise Berg, Ben Gidley, and Anna Krausova
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Religious visibility: perceptions and experiences of residents in two Muslim concentration suburbs in Melbourne, Australia
By Val Colic-Peisker, Masha Mikola, and Karien Dekker
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REMHU - Revista Interdisciplinar da Mobilidade Humana
Ano XXVII, No. 56, August 2019
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English-language articles and abstracts:
African Migrants in Latin America: (im) Mobility and Place-making
Place-making via traces and attachments: African migrants and their experiences of mobility, immobility and local insertion in Latin America. Introduction to the thematic dossier
By Nanneke Winters and Franziska Reiffen
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Spaces of transnational migration: a sociodemographic profile of African migrants in Brazil in the 21st century
By Rosana Baeninger, Natália Belmonte Demétrio, and Jóice Domeniconi
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Migration courses and new circularities: migrants from West Africa in Southern Brazil
By Lucas Cé Sangalli and Maria do Carmo dos Santos Gonçalves
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Labor pathways of migrants between Africa and Latin America: the case of Senegalese in Argentina.
By M. Luz Espiro
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Agency and associationism in contexts of institutional violence: actions of Senegalese migrants in the city of La Plata (Argentina)
By Sonia Raquel Voscoboinik and Bernarda Zubrzycki
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Pourquoi tu te mets là comme ça? Congolese migrants and everyday place-making in São Paulo
By Franziska Reiffen
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Mohamed’s store. Transnational spaces, Muslim practices and gender relations among Senegalese migrants in a small city in Rio Grande do Sul
By Margarita Rosa Gaviria Mejía and Marcele Scapin
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The Individual versus the State: Pre- and Post-Migration Bureaucracy
By Victoria Finn
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Beyond vigilance and control. Bolivian migration and regularization policies in the city of La Plata, Argentina
By Federico Rodrigo
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The reception of international students: Brazilians and Timorese in Portugal
Juliana Chatti Iorio and Silvia Garcia Nogueira
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Migratory Configurations: A Reflection for Three German Scenarios
By Menara Guizardi and Pablo Mardones
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