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This lecture explores the topics of border enforcement, theories of immigrant incorporation, and the political dimensions of immigrant incorporation. It discusses the history and effectiveness of border enforcement strategies, as well as the requirements and fluctuations of naturalization. The lecture also touches on other state immigrant incorporation policies and practices.
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Border Enforcement and Immigrant Incorporation (Immigrant incorporation is a theme we will return to) Political Science 126C / Chicano/Latino Studies 163 Lecture 7 January 29, 2009
Themes for Today • Border enforcement • Theories of Immigrant Incorporation • Political dimensions of immigrant incorporation – Naturalization
Most Popular Enforcement Strategy – Control at the Border • In the popular mind, that’s where the problem lies • Neglects the fact that 45 percent of unauthorized migrants are visa over-stayers • Assumed to be a quick, if expensive, fix • Current wave of border enforcement began in the early 1990s • Barriers • Technology • Staffing
Sustained Increase in Border Enforcement Spending Source: Wayne Cornelius. How Border Enforcement Has Reshaped Mexican Migration to the United States
And in Border Patrol Staffing Source: Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse
Secure Border Initiative & Secure Fence Act (2006) • Up to 700 miles of fence (border 1,900+ miles) • 1,800 hi-tech towers equipped with radar and video cameras • Ground sensors and vehicle barriers • Aerial drones • Cost: • Fence: $2.2 to $14 billion • Secure border: $2 billion
2009 Border Enforcement Budget • 19% increase in border security and immigration enforcement • $12.1 billion • Border fencing • Hire more border patrol • Expand number of teams to raid businesses • Goals (by end of 2009) • 20,000 border patrol FTE (authorized) • 601 of 670 miles of fence completed • 1,000 more detention beds
Will it Work? • Or, at least, will it work for unauthorized border crossers? • Dilemma 1 – Border patrol can’t hire fast enough, so won’t reach authorized levels • Dilemma 2 – Border controls since 1993 have not reduced unauthorized migration • Increased the cost of migration (increasing the use of coyotes) • Shifted points of entry (and the risks of nature) • Lack of response to new enforcement is not simply the result of faulty information on immigrants’ parts
Staffing Doesn’t Guarantee Apprehensions Source: Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse
Themes for Today • Border enforcement • Theories of Immigrant Incorporation • Political dimensions of immigrant incorporation – Naturalization
Models of Immigrant Incorporation • Assimilation • “New assimilation” with particular attention to status at entry • Segmented assimilation • Assimilation (definition) – the social process of absorbing one cultural group into harmony with another • Developed in Sociology, but has been adapted to political incorporation also
Standard Measures • Language • Education and labor force outcomes • Identity • Marriage patterns • All good indicators and offer important insights (highlighting that no model offers complete explanation of immigrant incorporation) • Focused on social indicators of particular interest to Sociologists • I want to focus on a formal political indicator – naturalization • Limit – only immigrants naturalize • So, doesn’t offer a multi-generational measure
Themes for Today • Border enforcement • Theories of Immigrant Incorporation • Political dimensions of immigrant incorporation – Naturalization
Naturalization Requirements (with some exceptions) • Reside legally in the United States for five years • Demonstrate speaking, writing, and reading abilities in English and knowledge of basic U.S. history and civics • Be of “good moral character” • Take an oath to defend the Constitution • Requires applicants to abjure loyalty to former sovereign • Pay fee of $595, plus $80 fee for fingerprinting • Informal – complete a 10 page application form
Why The Fluctuations? • Naturalization-eligible respond to incentives and resources • Incentives • Changes in the law that shape immigrant rights and opportunities • Changes in the attitude toward immigrants • Resources • Government promotion of naturalization (mid 1990s) • Community-based organizational efforts to promote naturalization
Naturalization in the Coming Years • Currently, • 8.5 million citizenship-eligible immigrants • Pool increases each year with newly eligible; increase at roughly the rate of new applications • Pool can diminish • Will require a national investment from immigrant advocacy community • Post-2006 support for naturalization must become continuous in immigrant communities • Congress could simply naturalization (unlikely in period of anti-immigrant fervor)
Other State Immigrant Incorporation Policies/Practices • States • Public (K-12) education • Language • Civics • Adult education • Professional licensing • General findings • Immigrants (and particularly their children) adopting U.S. cultural practices and values • Except for language, the adoption is not linear • Variation by nationality, status at entry, immigrant education, and experiences of co-ethnics in the United States