CITIZENSHIP, IMMIGRATION POLITICS, AND AMERICAN IDENTITY

Similar documents
U.S. Immigration Policy Political Science 126C / Chicano/Latino Studies 163 Fall 2010

Political Science 61 / Chicano/Latino Studies 64 Introduction to Race and Ethnicity in U.S. Politics ICS 174

Contemporary Immigration Soc 146. Winter Lecture: Tuesdays, Thursdays 2 3:15

Geography 320H1 Geographies of Transnationalism, Migration, and Gender Fall Term, 2015

M. KATHLEEN DINGEMAN-CERDA

Course Objectives: 1) To understand the relationship between religion and immigration in U.S. history and society

SOC 182: Topics in Immigration Dr. Tanya Golash-Boza, Sociology Fall 2015 UC Merced

History of American Immigration. History 21:512:230, Professor Michael Pekarofski. Tuesdays, 2:30 5:20 p.m., LSC 103

Crimmigration: The Intersection of Immigration and Criminal Law Spring 2013 Tuesdays: 1:30-4:15pm Room 306. Course Description

The Politics of Citizenship and Naturalization Gov 94cb Spring 2018

TOPICS IN AMERICAN POLITICS: WOMEN IN POLITICS

SYLLABUS AMERICAL IMMIGRATION: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE

Justice and Civil Society

Course Overview: Seminar Requirements:

INTRODUCTION TO RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS POLITICAL SCIENCE 280A FIELD SEMINAR I FALL 2017 THURSDAY 1:00-3:50 LOCATION: BUNCHE 4357

Orsi, Robert A. (1985). The Madonna of 115th Street: Faith and Community in Italian Harlem, New Haven: Yale University Press.

Syllabus for RPOS321/RPAD321: State and Local Government

The Power of the Ballot. Deborah Carter-Meyers, Lenna Madden, & Barbara Wiltsey. Azusa Pacific University ILA Case Study

National Alliance for Filipino Concerns DEFERRED ACTION /DREAM ACT PRIMER August 2012

4592 Special Topics in Women and Literature. Labored Realisms: Modern Slavery, Migration, and Human Trafficking

Syllabus Latino Workers in the U.S. Labor Studies and Employment Relations School of Management and Labor Relations, Rutgers University Spring 2018

Migration ANTH /SOCI Course Objectives

SYLLABUS History 101: United States History to 1877 Section 2339 Wednesday, 6:00 to 9:10 p.m. in Social Sciences 117 Fall 2015 El Camino College


REBECCA HAMLIN Grinnell College 1210 Park Street Grinnell, Iowa, (510)

John Marshall Law School Spring 2015 Remedies Evening Division. Thursdays 6:15p.m.-9:30p.m., Room TBA

Tentative and subject to change

U.S. IMMIGRATION POLICY: YESTERDAY AND TODAY. WEEK 3 Immigration Moving Forward. Nogales Border Fence At Night Hugh Cabot

Rhodes College. Department of International Studies

Pol S 345: Immigration Policy Spring 2012 MWF 2:00-3:00 PM W0162 Lagomarcino

Race, Ethnicity, and Migration

KATIE DINGEMAN-CERDA 3151 Social Science Plaza University of California, Irvine Irvine, CA (949)

PHOTOVOICE: Exploring the Effects of Migration in Sending and Receiving Communities

Immigrant Integration and Local Communities In the United States

POLITICAL SCIENCE 1320 (H) INTRODUCTION TO AMERICAN GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS

Course Syllabus. Course Information HUHI 6342 American Political Cultures: Liberalism JO M 1:00-3:45 Fall 2013

New Trump Deportation Rules Allow Far

Sociology 236A / Law 436 International Migration. Syllabus. Roger Waldinger Hiroshi Motomura

Know and Exercise Your Rights! Steps to Prepare for the Potential Impact of the Trump Administration on Immigrant and Refugee Communities

McGill University Department of Sociology Fall Term 2017 SOCI 520: Migration and Immigrant Groups Wednesdays 9:35 to 11:25 LEA 738

KATIE DINGEMAN-CERDA Postdoctoral Teaching Fellow Department of Sociology and Criminology University of Denver (949)

Borders, Boundaries, and the Ethics of Immigration

American Immigration Politics Political Science 222 Professor Rebecca Hamlin MWF 10:00-10:50

Political Science 619: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics (Spring 2014)

Political Science 913/Urban Studies 913 Urban Political Process Spring Course Overview

POL 207Y: POLITICS IN EUROPE. Students are required to complete four assignments in order to pass the course:

SOSC 5170 Qualitative Research Methodology

HI 310: 2016 M/W/F/:1-2 CAS

SOCIAL MOVEMENTS & GLOBALIZATION

U.S. INSTITUTIONS AND THE POLICY PROCESS PUBP-730 Spring 2017

Unafraid Educators in the New Administration Supporting Undocumented Students and Families. TinyUrl.com/SupportImmigrantStudents

AMST 298G Immigration & The U.S.-Mexico Border Summer Session II: July 10-August 18, 2017 Instructor: Jacqueline Partida

PO102, R: Introduction to Comparative Politics Dwight R. Hahn, Ph.D.

The Inalienable Rights of Immigrants and Undocumented School-Age Children

Heidy Sarabia, Ph.D.

21H.346 France : Enlightenment, Revolution, Napoleon Fall 2005

Strategies to Attract and Retain Immigrants in U.S. Metropolitan Areas. Dr. Marie Price George Washington University

Timeline of U.S. Immigration

TOM K. WONG 3408 Bancroft St. San Diego, CA Cell: (951)

MIGRATION & GLOBALIZATION SOSC. 105 (1) FALL

231 INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS Fall 2008 Department of Political Science Muskingum College POLS MWF: 3:00 3:50 pm 15 Cambridge Hall

Annual Minnesota Statewide Survey Fall Findings Report- Immigration questions

Revolutions in Modern Latin America

Bipartisan Support for Path to Citizenship for Unauthorized Immigrants Views of Immigrants and Refugees as a Critical Threat Hit New Lows

Transnational Organised Crime, Trafficking in Persons, Smuggling of Migrants International Law and Domestic Practice

Introduction to Mexican American Policy Studies MAS 308 Unique Number: Fall 2011 University of Texas at Austin

METHOD OF PRESENTATION

Ethics and Public Policy. Government / Public Policy 42 Spring 2016 Dartmouth College

Menchaca Spring 2013 Anth 389K/LAS 391/MAS392 W /40645/36250 SAC AMERICAN IMMIGRANT CULTURAL EXPERIENCES

Core Curriculum Supplement

Challenges at the Border: Examining the Causes, Consequences, and Responses to the Rise in Apprehensions at the Southern Border

Legal Representation in Immigration Courts Leads to Better Outcomes, Economic Stability

POLITICAL INTOLERANCE IN WORLD POLITICS L Fall Semester, Dr. J. L. Gibson Sidney W. Souers Professor of Government

315 Ladd Office Hours MW Noon 2:30 pm, T TH 2 3 or whenever my door is open or by appointment

Political Science 103 Spring, 2018 Dr. Edward S. Cohen INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

Gender and Immigration (HIUS 181/281) Spring Quarter 2012

Seminar on Latino Politics in the United States

IMMIGRATION UNDER THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION: IMPACT ON HEALTHCARE EMPLOYERS. Roger Tsai Holland & Hart

One of the most controversial and divisive issues in current American politics is

Almost certain 80% Probably 9% % Will not vote 4% Don't know 1%

This course will analyze contemporary migration at the urban, national and

AAST433/GVPT368C (section 0101) Asian American Politics Monday/Wednesdays 2-3:15 TAWES 0234 Course website on ELMS

PSC : American Politics 212 Graham Building MWF, 10:00-10:50 Spring Course Description

Photo: Breckenridge, CO

POLS 260: INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS Department of Political Science Northern Illinois University Tuesday & Thursday 11-12:15 pm DU 461

In Their Own Words: A Nationwide Survey of Undocumented Millennials

It Is Unfair to Deny Innocent Immigrant Children Legal Status

PS 580: Introduction to Methods of Political Science Research Fall 2006: Christopher K. Butler

FACULTY: Will G. Dickey, LMSW, JD OFFICE HOURS: After each class. Phone: FAX:

UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN OSHKOSH

Political Science 395, Section 15. Spring

COLLECTIVE ACTION FOR SOCIAL CHANGE

SOCI 350 International Migration and the Crisis

The College of Charleston. Spring POLI American Government. Tu-Th 9:25-10:40. Maybank 207. Tuesdays 3:00-4 P.M. and by appointment

Anthropology of Global Aid ANTH 663 Spring 2015, MW 1:30-2:45 University of Hawai`i at Manoa

Political Science 423 DEMOCRATIC THEORY. Thursdays, 3:30 6:30 pm, Foster 305. Patchen Markell University of Chicago Spring 2000

The College of Charleston. Spring POLI Policymaking in State Legislatures. Tuesdays-Thursdays 1:40 2:55 P.M.

Immigration Law MCLE Meeting Bar Center Classroom 9/13/17

INTL NATIONALISM AND CITIZENSHIP IN EUROPE

SYP 3456 Societies in the World

Transcription:

CITIZENSHIP, IMMIGRATION POLITICS, AND AMERICAN IDENTITY Rutgers University-Newark Political Science 502 Spring 2015, Tuesday 5:30-8:10 pm Conklin Hall 238 Dr. Mara Sidney Hill Hall 723, msidney@andromeda.rutgers.edu mssidney@gmail.com, 973-353-5787 Office Hours: Thursday 4-5:30 and by appointment One need only glance at the daily news to find evidence that immigration, notions of citizenship, and understandings of American identity are omnipresent and interweaving facets of American political life. Unauthorized immigrant youth who arrived in the U.S. as young children organized themselves as Dreamers and ultimately succeeded at influencing some state legislatures to pass Dream Acts, and President Obama to create Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. How did they capitalize on notions of American identity and the American Dream to launch their successful movement? Will their parents be able to hold onto the prospect for regularization that Obama recently ordered in his Deferred Action for Parental Accountability, or will the Republican Congress attempt to derail this program before it starts? And what are the ethical implications of offering legal status to this one slice of the unauthorized population? What do the Charlie Hebdo and related attacks signal about immigrant integration in France? How do we interpret the heroic efforts of some immigrants alongside the murderous actions of others? How will these events influence policy making in France, in Europe, here in the U.S.? What do we make of a reported upsurge of French Jews immigrating to Israel? What are our obligations toward providing opportunities for immigrants? How do societies do so while maintaining security and respecting diversity? Mexico recently began issuing birth certificates to its citizens from its U.S. consulates, as a way to help unauthorized Mexican immigrants prepare their applications for deferred action. Previously, Mexicans needed to obtain these documents in Mexico. How do immigration policies in the U.S. shape policies in other places? How do the interests of individual immigrants and their families align with those of their home and host countries? What do these relationships show about globalization and interdependence? What are the ethical issues that arise? We could find many more examples of current events and controversies that demonstrate the centrality of immigration and citizenship to US politics and daily life. This course will provide theoretical and analytical frameworks for thinking through questions such as these. This semester we will examine the nexus of immigration politics, notions of citizenship, and American identity. We will draw on concepts of citizenship to analyze the evolution of immigration policy in the United States, from the 19th Century to the present post-9/11 era, considering how policies convey messages about who counts as American. We will examine immigrant integration into U.S. society, and the work of non-governmental organizations in fostering practices of citizenship and participation. We will consider how policies and political actors (at national and local levels) construct categories of immigrants -- e.g., undocumented, families, skilled workers, refugees -- how racial and gender 1

hierarchies intersect with these categories, and the consequences of these constructions for immigrants' daily lives. We will trace how immigrants resist exclusionary discourse and practice, and in the process offer new understandings of American identity and ways of life. Welcome to class! TEXTS Books The following required books have been ordered through the Rutgers Bookstore in Bradley Hall and at New Jersey Books, University & Bleeker Streets. They can also be found through online sellers and some are available as e-books. Used copies should be available for most, but some are too recently published. 1. Andreas, Peter. 2009 SECOND EDITION. Border Games: Policing the US-Mexico Divide. Cornell University Press. 2. Bloemraad, Irene. Becoming a Citizen: Incorporating Immigrants and Refugees in the United States and Canada. University of California Press (2006) 3. Carens, Joseph H. The Ethics of Immigration. Oxford University Press (2013) 4. Coutin, Susan Bibler. Nations of Emigrants: Shifting Boundaries of Citizenship in El Salvador and the United States. Cornell University Press (2007) 5. Hinze, Annika. Turkish Berlin: Integration Policy and Urban Space. University of Minnesota Press (2013). 6. Jones-Correa, Michael. Between Two Nations: The Political Predicament of Latinos in New York City. Cornell University Press (1998) 7. Joppke, Christian. Citizenship and Immigration (2010). Polity Press. 8. Masuoka, Natalie and Jane Junn. The Politics of Belonging: Race, Public Opinion, and Immigration. University of Chicago Press (2013) Articles and chapters. Additional required readings are available on Blackboard (under READINGS link). Registered students can access Blackboard at blackboard.newark.rutgers.edu. COURSE REQUIREMENTS Graduate study in the social sciences uses the practices of reading, writing, and informed discussion to develop students abilities to think critically, to analyze the political and social world, and to communicate ideas to one another and the broader public. Thus in this course, you will have lots of practice reading material, discussing it with one another, and writing about it. Reading. Each week you will read either selections from a book, an entire book, or a selection of articles. You should read these materials as works of social science, thus differently than you would read a novel or a newspaper. This takes practice, and is difficult at first, so try not to become discouraged! When reading, your aim is to identify and to reflect on: The author s purpose for writing the book, the core questions that the author asks, The author s conclusions and/or answers to his/her questions, The author s core arguments and their evidentiary basis. These may be causal arguments, about how pieces of the social and political world fit together what factors shape naturalization rates of different immigrant groups, for example. They may be conceptual or definitional arguments 2

for example, what are core aspects of citizenship and why? What empirical or logical evidence does the author use to support these arguments? Generally, what light does the author shed on notions of citizenship, on conceptions of American identity, on the politics of immigration? What do you know or understand now that you did not know or understand before? Reading with these questions in mind means you probably should not read the books or articles in chronological order, waiting to see how the story ends. Instead, you should start with the first and last chapters to identify the overarching questions and answers, and to get a preview of the book s structure and core arguments. Only then should you read the middle chapters, to see how the author constructs and supports the argument and conclusions. (You can even try reading each chapter in this way the first and last sections, followed by the middle sections.) Participation. Informed participation is critical to the success of this course, and to your own learning process. Our course will proceed as a guided discussion, and I expect all class members to take part as we discuss each week s readings and their larger implications. I expect you to be respectful of others contributions to discussion, to listen closely, and to be mindful of timing and tone. I will manage and guide the discussion. WRITING Homework. Each week, students will prepare a short written assignment based on the readings. Bring two copies to class, because I will collect them at the beginning of class, and refer to them during class. I will grade them on a scale of A, A-, B, B-, C, C-, etc. Directions for this assignment are in a separate handout. Research Paper. Students will research and write a 10-12-page research paper that engages class material on citizenship and immigration policy and links it to additional readings on a topic they choose. Students will prepare Research Notes throughout the semester to assemble necessary materials for the paper, including preparing a topic statement, two annotated bibliographies, and a presentation. The final full paper will be due at the end of the semester. You will receive separate handouts about these assignments. Course grades will be calculated as follows: Weekly assignments 45% Research Paper 40% Research Notes & Presentation 15% Students who are absent more than once during the semester will lose 2 points from their final grade for each unexcused absence. In accordance with university policy, absences can be excused only in the following cases: illness; death in the family; religious observance; official college business. These instances must be documented. COURSE OUTLINE January 20 Introduction to class 3

January 27 February 3 February 10 February 17 February 24 March 3 March 10 March 17 March 24 March 31 April 7 April 14 April 21 April 28 Joppke, Citizenship and Immigration Carens, The Ethics of Immigration pp. 1-13 and Chapters 2-8 Coutin, Nations of Emigrants Masuoka and Junn, The Politics of Belonging Gender, Citizenship and Immigration Kerber, The Stateless as the Citizen s Other Bhabha, The Mere Fortuity of Birth Banarjee, Transnational Subcontracting, Indian IT Workers, and the US Visa System Rodriguez, Excerpt from Migrants for Export Bloemraad, Becoming a Citizen Jones-Correa, Between Two Nations Research Note 1 due: Topic statement No class: Spring break Hinze, Turkish Berlin Research Note 2 due: Part I Bibliography US Immigrant Integration Policy & Programs Welcoming America web site Make the Road New York web site Mitnik and Halpern-Finnerty, Immigration and Local Governments: Inclusionary Local Policies in the Era of State Rescaling Presidential Memorandum Creating Welcoming Communities and Fully Integrating Immigrants and Refugees Andreas, Border Games: Policing the US-Mexico Divide Research Note 3 due: Part II Bibliography Deportation Studies Golash-Boza, The Immigration Industrial Complex and A Confluence of Interests in Immigration Enforcement Wicker, Deportation at the Limits of Tolerance Maira, Radical Deportation Peutz, Criminal Alien Deportees in Somaliland Carens, The Ethics of Immigration Chapters 9-13 TED talks: Student presentations on research readings 4

RESEARCH PAPER DUE FRIDAY, MAY 8 BY NOON 5