Ethnic Studies 135AC Contemporary U.S. Immigration Summer 2006, Session D Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday (10:30am-1pm) 279 Dwinelle

Similar documents
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY. Immigration and the Transformation of American Society Spring 2014

Professor Ariela Schachter Office: 222 Seigle Hall Office Hours: TBA

Race, Ethnicity, and Migration

Office Hours: 487 Barrows Hall, Tu 10am-2pm, 3:30-4:45pm; Th 3:30-4:45pm Sign-up at

Transnational Ties of Latino and Asian Americans by Immigrant Generation. Emi Tamaki University of Washington

Economics of Migration. John Palmer Pompeu Fabra University 2016

Course Syllabus. SOC 3363 Immigrants and Immigration in U.S. Society Section 001

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

Louis DeSipio 2 University of California, Irvine. The political incorporation of immigrants and their children has long been critical to

SOCIOLOGY T240z (#9684) Contemporary Immigration & the Second Generation Spring 2017 Tues/Thurs 11:45AM-1:05PM BA215

SOCI 303A(102) Sociology of Migration

Mexican Immigrant Political and Economic Incorporation. By Frank D. Bean University of California, Irvine

Glick, Schiller, N.L. Basch and C. Blanc-Szantion, Towards a Transnational Perspective of Migration

FORWARD OR NEUTRAL ON THE LANGUAGE SHIFT: CHOICES BY BILINGUAL PARENTS IN THE MEXICAN AND CHINESE SECOND GENERATION

This section provides a brief explanation of major immigration and

MEXICAN MIGRATION MATURITY AND ITS EFFECTS ON FLOWS INTO LOCAL AREAS: A TEST OF THE CUMULATIVE CAUSATION PERSPECTIVE

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

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

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

Course Overview: Seminar Requirements:

Migrant Social Networks: Vehicles for Migration, Integration, and Development

Does Acculturation Lower Educational Achievement for Children of Immigrants? Emily Greenman

Washington University International and Area Studies & Department of Political Science

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

SOC 125: Sociology of Immigration

Poli 343 Fall 2013 International Migration and the Politics of Immigration

CURRICULUM VITAE. Jimy M. Sanders 2010

SUP-311 The Economic Impact of Immigration

METHOD OF PRESENTATION

SO 1000 LE Introduction to Sociology or SO 1001 LE Sociology of Modern Life, plus any additional course in Sociology.

In the News: Speaking English in the United States

Immigration, Incorporation and Citizenship Fall 2008 Thursdays, 2-4pm 180 Barrows

NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL THESIS

18 Pathways Spring 2015

Spring 2005 Justice Studies 350: Immigration and Justice

Tracking Intergenerational Progress for Immigrant Groups: The Problem of Ethnic Attrition

ASSIMILATION AND LANGUAGE

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

Political Science 72903/Sociology Page 1

The Integration of Immigrants into American Society WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY BOARD. Karthick Ramakrishnan

Conclusions. Conference on Children of Immigrants in New Places of Settlement. American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Cambridge, April 19-21, 2017

Cuban Refugees Summary/Outline

TOPICS IN COMPARATIVE POLITICS I Citizenship and Immigration in Europe and North America

The Hispanic Challenge SIDEBAR: From Diversity to Dominance. From Diversity to Dominance Foreign-Born Population Living in the United States

None. As a result of taking this course, the students could be able to:

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

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

Second-Generation Immigrants? The 2.5 Generation in the United States n

La dolce vita Integration patterns of migrants in Italy Theory and previous findings

Course outline and reading list: SO4292 Migration 2013/14. Part II: The first and second generation in Europe and the United States

Seminar on Latino Politics in the United States

Urban America: Construction and Consequence Fall Quarter, 2017 T., Th. 9:30 am -11:00 pm SE2 1304

Snapshots of the past

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

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

INTE-GE 2545: INTERDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES ON THE NEW IMMIGRATION NEW YORK UNIVERSITY

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

New York University Robert F. Wagner School of Public Service. Race, Ethnicity, Class and Gender in American Cities 1 P 11.

Political Science 61 / Chicano/Latino Studies 64 Introduction to Race and Ethnicity in U.S. Politics HH 178

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

ESTIMATES OF INTERGENERATIONAL LANGUAGE SHIFT: SURVEYS, MEASURES, AND DOMAINS

Migration ANTH /SOCI Course Objectives

An American Dream Unfulfilled: The Limited Mobility of Mexican Americans*

hyper-selectivity and asian racial mobility van c. tran i Today s immigrants hail from more diverse

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

Course Description. Participation in the seminar

Working Paper Series Princeton University

Immigration Policy Law 422 Spring 2014 Elina Treyger. ***Preliminary Syllabus, Subject to Revisions*** December 19, 2013

Canadian Labour Market and Skills Researcher Network

ETHN 129/ USP 135: Asian & Latina Immigrant Workers in the Global Economy

2015 Working Paper Series

SOCIOLOGY 130: SOCIAL INEQUALITIES

American Ethnic Studies

Educational Disparities between the Native and Immigrant Populations in the United States

Syllabus Latino Workers in the U.S. Labor Studies and Employment Relations School of Management and Labor Relations, Rutgers University Fall 2016

Determinants of Transnationalism among New Legal Immigrants in the United States

Cultural Identity of Migrants in USA and Canada

Challenging the Status Quo: A Review on Second-Generation Latinos Joining American Mainstream

INTERNAL WAR AND THE STATE

THE MIGRATION READER

Home Culture History Issues Links Viet Nam Contact Forum Jobs

SOCIOLOGY 400 COMPARATIVE MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP Winter 2018

LSE-PKU Summer School 2018 A Complex Society: Social Issues and Social Policy in China

American Ethnic Studies

IMMIGRATION ECONOMICS ECONOMICS 980u, Fall 2014 Department of Economics Harvard University

National and Urban Contexts. for the Integration of the Immigrant Second Generation. in the United States and Canada

POSC 337: Mexican Politics Course Syllabus Fall 2013

Labor Market Consequences of Immigration. Econ/Demog C175 Economic Demography Prof. Goldstein Spring 2018, UC Berkeley

Understanding Immigration:

Friday Session: 8:45 10:15 am

Urban Government and Politics Political Science 213

IMMIGRATION AND PUBLIC POLICY

URBAN SOCIOLOGY: THE CITY AND SOCIAL CHANGE IN THE AMERICAS Spring 1999

social mobility among second-generation latinos

Immigration Facts. What Every Citizen Needs to Know

Race, Immigration, and Planning. Session 2 Lecture Notes: J. Phillip Thompson Alethia Jones

SYLLABUS AMERICAL IMMIGRATION: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY Rockefeller College of Public Affairs and Policy Department of Political Science

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

Authoritarian Regimes Political Science 4060

Transcription:

Ethnic Studies 135AC Contemporary U.S. Immigration Summer 2006, Session D Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday (10:30am-1pm) 279 Dwinelle Instructor: Bao Lo Email: bao21@yahoo.com Mailbox: 506 Barrows Hall Office Hours: 544 Barrows; Wed 1pm-2pm Course Description: Immigration to the United States has included migrants from every part of the globe. More recently, the majority of post-1965 immigrants have come from Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean. It is estimated that if the new immigrants from these countries continue to account for the larger share of immigration, the population of the U.S. will acquire an additional 80 million as a direct or indirect consequence of immigration by 2050. 1 Immigration, then, plays the dominant role in our future population growth as the number of immigrants and their offspring continues to grow. Thus, the arrival of immigrants from these particular parts of the globe has and will continue to change the racial and ethnic composition of the American population, and thereby redefine the social meanings of race and ethnicity and American identity. Furthermore, this new immigration has also raised questions about the impacts on the economic and political institutions of the U.S. In order to understand the causes and consequences of migrations of this magnitude, the course will provide a historical, political, economic, and social context for understanding contemporary U.S. immigration. We will first review the political and social responses of the American public toward immigration, which have come in the form of immigration policy and reform and anti-immigrant sentiment and nativist attitudes toward immigrants, in order to provide a historical and political context for understanding contemporary U.S. immigration. Next, we will review the major theoretical paradigms of international migration to understand why people migrate across international boundaries and to the U.S. in particular. We will then analyze the limitations of these migration theories in explaining the dynamics of contemporary U.S. immigration. We will also explore the major debates that revolve around the economic costs and benefits of immigration. In particular, we will examine the key arguments for understanding the impacts of immigrants on the U.S. economy, as well as the impact of immigrant utilization of state sponsored and supported social programs. Lastly, we will examine the lives of several immigrant groups within a comparative framework, to explore how contemporary immigrants have changed after their arrival. We will explore the new literature on immigrant adaptation that developed in response to doubts raised about the assimilability of post-1965 immigrants, who are predominantly of Asian, Latin American and Caribbean descent. In particular, we will examine three important aspects of immigrant life: social networks, gender and generational relations, to understand how these immigrants have adapted, assimilated and become incorporated into American society. Particular attention will be given to how the processes of assimilation and incorporation, which are influenced by social, political, and economic forces, affect the lives of contemporary immigrants. In doing so, we will gain a deeper understanding of how race, class, and gender interplay with and affect the lives of immigrants. We will conclude with an analysis of the current literature on the second generation and explore what the future will hold for the children of today s immigrants. 1 Smith, James P. and Barry Edmonston, eds. The New Americans: Economic, Demographic, and Fiscal Effects of Immigration. (Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press, 1997), p.95. - 1 -

Course Requirements: a) Attendance is required for the course. You will not pass this class if you are absent, for any reason, for more than three class periods. Please be on time. b) Class Participation (15%): There will be weekly class activities/assignments that you will be expected to participate in and prepare for in advance, by utilizing the assigned readings. Also, you are expected to prepare for lecture and class discussion by completing all assigned readings. (Your active participation in class is strongly encouraged so that you and your classmates can experience the most effective and engaging discussion of the readings.) c) Response Papers (30%): You will be required to write 2 response papers (4-5 pgs each). I will give you a question or set of questions about the readings, which you will be asked to respond in a concise and analytical manner. d) Presentations (20%): You will be asked to present your final paper (your proposal on immigration reform) with your evaluation of the texts and readings that support your position on immigration policy reform. When you present, you are responsible for 1) summarizing and evaluating the readings and research you will be using; 2) preparing questions you may have to refine your proposal; and 3) providing a visual component to support your stance on immigration reform. This is your opportunity to ask questions and get feedback on your proposal (ie. What will work or what is ineffective with what you propose? How will this affect immigration and the lives of immigrants? What matters to you in regards to reforming immigration? Why should this be important to everyone else?) e) Final Paper (35%): You will be asked to write your own proposal on immigration policy reform that reflects the current debates on immigration (6-8 pgs; 4-5 readings/texts required). In this proposal, you will be expected to evaluate the texts and readings of the course that are most relevant and support your position on immigration policy reform. In your evaluation of the texts and readings, you should engage the readings or authors in some dialogue about the current debates on immigration. *NOTE: NO LATE WORK WILL BE ACCEPTED!!! REQUIRED TEXTS (Available at the ASUC Bookstore) Borjas, George J. Heaven s Door: Immigration Policy and the American Economy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1999. Bean, Frank and Gillian Stevens. America s Newcomers and the Dynamics of Diversity. New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2003. A course reader will also be available at University Copy Service, 2425 Channing Way - 2 -

America s Response to Immigration: A Historical and Political Context for Understanding Contemporary Immigration American response to immigration has taken two distinct forms: a political response and a social response in the form of immigration policies and anti-immigrant sentiment or nativism. We will first explore current nativist or anti-immigrant attitudes that are helping to fuel the debates over contemporary immigration. Then, we will conduct a historical overview of U.S. immigration policy to understand the ways in which anti-immigrant sentiment and nativist attitudes toward immigrants have affected U.S. immigration policy. More importantly, we will examine U.S. immigration history and policy with American social responses to immigration in order to provide a historical, political and social context for understanding contemporary migration. By the end of this section, you should be able to 1) identify the major periods of U.S. immigration policy 2) explain the major immigration laws of each period and 3) analyze the historical, social, political, and economic contexts of immigration policy formation during each period to understand the current economic, social and political context for today s immigrants. Wednesday, July 5 Course Introduction Thursday, July 6 (Social Responses: Nativism and Anti-Immigrant Sentiment) 1) Huntington, Samuel. 2004. The Hispanic Challenge. Foreign Policy :30-45. 2) Johnson, James H. Jr., Walter C. Farrell Jr. and Chandra Guinn. 1999. Immigration Reform and the Browning of America: Tensions, Conflicts, and Community Instability in Metropolital Los Angeles. Pp. 390-411 in Charles Hirschman, Philip Kasinitz, and Josh DeWind, eds., The Handbook of International Migration: The American Experience, New York: Russell Sage Foundation. Tuesday, July 11 (Political Response: Immigration Policy and Reform) 1) Tichenor, Daniel J. Chapter 1: Introduction, in Dividing Lines: The Politics of Immigration Control in America. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2002, pp.1-15. 2) Dinnerstein, Leonard & David M. Reimers. Chapter 4: Ethnic Conflict and Immigration Restriction, in Ethnic Americans: A History of Immigration. New York: Harper Collins Publishers, 1988, pp.63-84. 3) Dinnerstein, Leonard & David M. Reimers. Chapter 5: Post-World War II, A New Wave of Immigrants, in Ethnic Americans: A History of Immigration. New York: Harper Collins Publishers, 1988, pp.85-106. Wednesday, July 12 (Political Response: Immigration Policy and Reform) cont d 1) Tichenor, Daniel J. Chapter 9: Two Faces of Expansion: The Politics of Immigration Reform, in Dividing Lines: The Politics of Immigration Control in America. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2002, pp.242-288. *CLASS ACTIVITY Theories of Migration - 3 -

Immigration scholars have long debated the question of what factors cause people to migrate across international borders. In this section, we will review the major schools of thought on migration: neoclassical economics, the new economics of migration, segmented labor market theory, world systems theory, social capital theory, and cumulative causation. Specifically, we will utilize the major theories of international migration to understand why people migrate across international boundaries and to the U.S. in particular. Finally, we will analyze the limitations of these migration theories in explaining the dynamics of contemporary U.S. immigration. By the end of this section, you should be able to 1) identify the major schools of thought on migration and understand how each differs in its explanation of the movement of people and 2) analyze the strengths and weaknesses of the various migration theories in explaining contemporary U.S. immigration. Thursday, July 13 (The Major Theories of Migration) 1) Massey, Douglas S., Why Does Immigration Occur?: A Theoretical Synthesis, in Charles Hirschman, Philip Kasinitz, and Josh DeWind, eds., The Handbook of International Migration: The American Experience, New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1999: pp.34-52. Tuesday, July 18 (The Limitations of Migration Theories) 1) Pessar, Patricia R, The Role of Gender, Households, and Social Networks in the Migration Process: A Review and Appraisal, in Charles Hirschman, Philip Kasinitz, and Josh DeWind, eds., The Handbook of International Migration: The American Experience, New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1999: pp.53-70. 2) Zolberg, Aristide R, Matters of State: Theorizing Immigration Policy. in Charles Hirschman, Philip Kasinitz, and Josh DeWind, eds., The Handbook of International Migration: The American Experience, New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1999: pp.71-93. 3) Saskia Sassen, America s Immigration Problem, in Saskia Sassen, Globalization and Its Discontents: Essays on the New Mobility of People and Money, New York: The New Press, 1998: pp.31-53. The Economic Debates The new immigrants have raised questions about the economic impacts on native workers and the welfare state. However, much of the research and discussion about these impacts have been dominated by economists. These scholars tend to emphasize immigrant restriction and immigration policy reform that will benefit the native worker and citizen and lessen the economic impacts on the welfare state. Consequently, their work explores only the economic aspects of immigration and has no focus or discussion over other aspects of immigrant life, such as gender, social capital, and so on. Thus, economic perspectives dominate much of our understanding of the immigration debates and have in turn led to a primary focus on the economic consequences of immigration. In this section, we will explore the major debates that revolve around the economic costs and benefits of immigration. Thus, in this section, you should be able to examine the strengths and weaknesses of the key arguments regarding the impacts of immigrants on the U.S. economy, as well as the impact of immigrant utilization of state sponsored and supported social programs. Wednesday, July 19 (The Unskilled Immigrants) - 4 -

1) Borjas, George J., Heaven s Door (Ch. 1, 2) *CLASS ACTIVITY Thursday, July 20 (Labor Market Impacts) 1) Borjas, George J., Heaven s Door (Ch. 4) 2) Card, David. Is the New Immigration Really So Bad? (January 2005). Tuesday, July 25 (Immigration and the Welfare State)/Policy Recommendations Response Paper #1 Due 1) Borjas, George J., Heaven s Door (Ch. 6, 11) 2) Bean, Frank and Gillian Stevens. America s Newcomers and the Dynamics of Diversity (Ch. 4, 11) Immigrant Adaptation and Incorporation Although much of the immigration literature has been dominated by an economist perspective, there is growing literature that is exploring various aspects of immigrant life to extend economic explanations of the causes and consequences of immigration. For instance, this growing literature has approached a study of immigrants through a sociological lens to explore the dynamics of immigrant life such as social networks, gender and generational relations. In particular, these studies explore how immigrants have changed after their arrival by examining how immigrants adapt, assimilate and become incorporated into American society. In their efforts to understand the social and cultural integration and structural assimilation of immigrants, these studies are able to illuminate the complexities of the immigrant experience and immigrant life, and in turn provide greater understanding about the consequences of immigration. Furthermore, this literature has also embarked on a study of the second generation in an effort to understand the extent and the circumstances under which immigrants experience the process of assimilation that determine their full incorporation or lack of it, into the American social, economic and political life. By the end of this section, you should be able to 1) develop a deeper understanding of how contemporary immigrants adapt, assimilate and become incorporated into American society that allows you to view the immigration experience outside the economist framework of understanding immigration on solely economic terms, 2) comprehend the complexities of the immigrant experience and the dynamics of immigrant life and 3) understand how immigrants will fare after subsequent generations, based on the immigrant adaptation literature that focuses on the experiences of the second generation. Wednesday, July 26 (Patterns of Incorporation) - 5 -

1) Bean, Frank and Gillian Stevens. America s Newcomers and the Dynamics of Diversity. (Ch. 6, 7, 8) *CLASS ACTIVITY Thursday, July 27 (Assimilation Theories) 1) Alba, Richard and Victor Nee, Rethinking Assimilation Theory for a New Era of Immigration, in Charles Hirschman, Philip Kasinitz, and Josh DeWind, eds., The Handbook of International Migration: The American Experience, New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1999: pp. 137-160. Tuesday, August 1 (The Forces that Shape the Processes of Settlement and Incorporation) Response Paper #2 Due 1) Menjivar, Cecilia. Chapter 4: The Context of Reception in the United States, in Fragmented Ties: Salvadoran Immigrant Networks in America. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000, pp.77-114. 2) Waters, Mary C, Chapter 3: Racial and Ethnic Identity Choices, in Black Identities: West Indian Immigrant Dreams and American Realities. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1999, pp.44-93. 3) Hondagneu-Sotelo, Pierrette, Chapter 4: Gendered Transitions, in Gendered Transitions: Mexican Experiences of Immigration, Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1994, 53-97. Wed., August 2 (The Lives of Immigrants and their Process of Settlement and Incorporation) 1) Menjivar, Cecilia. Chapter 5: The Dynamics of Social Networks, in Fragmented Ties: Salvadoran Immigrant Networks in America. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000, pp. 115-156. 2) Waters, Mary C, Chapter 5: Encountering American Race Relations, in Black Identities: West Indian Immigrant Dreams and American Realities. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1999, pp. 140-191. 3) Pierrette Hongadneu-Sotelo, Chapter 6: Women Consolidating Settlement, in Gendered Transitions: Mexican Experiences of Immigration, Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of - 6 -

California Press, 1994, 1-18 Thursday, August 3 (The Second Generation) 1) Zhou, Min, Segmented Assimilation: Issues, Controversies, and Recent Research on the New Second Generation, in Charles Hirschman, Philip Kasinitz, and Josh DeWind, eds., The Handbook of International Migration: The American Experience, New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1999: pp.196-211. 2) Rumbaut, Ruben and Alejandro Portes, Ethnogenesis: Coming of Age in Immigrant America, in Ruben Rumbaut and Alejandro Portes, eds., Ethnicities: Children of Immigrants in America, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001: pp. 1-19. Tuesday, August 8 (The Second Generation) 1) Zhou, Min, Straddling Different Worlds: The Acculturation of Vietnamese Refugee Children, in Ruben Rumbaut and Alejandro Portes, eds., Ethnicities: Children of Immigrants in America, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001: pp. 187-227. 2) David E. López and Ricardo D. Stanton-Salazar, Mexican Americans: A Second Generation at Risk, in Rubén G. Rumbaut and Alejandro Portes, eds., Ethnicities: Children of Immigrants in America, Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press and New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2001: 57-90. Wednesday, August 9 Thursday, August 10 Course Conclusion *Final Paper Due - 7 -