The Politics of Immigration: Race, Rights, & Activism Class Time/Day: 3:00-4:15pm / TR Instructor: Professor Chris Zepeda-Millán Office Hours: TR 4:30-5:30pm Email: jzepeda2@lmu.edu Course Description: This course is designed to provide students with a critical introduction to the Politics of Immigration. The class will begin with a review of some of the mainstream and alternative explanations experts have proposed as being the root-causes and initiating forces of international migration (from colonization to economic restructuring). We will subsequently turn our attention to the dynamics of immigration policymaking and examine how race, gender, sexuality, and class both impact and are impacted by immigration laws. The course will then shift focus and take a closer look at some of the most contentious topics related to immigration such as: its effects on the American economy and workers, cultural assimilation, undocumented immigration, border militarization, and racialized nativism. The class concludes by examining the various forms of political participation (from voting patterns to political activism) that immigrants themselves have traditionally and currently engage in. Coursework Requirements: 1) Mandatory in-class presentation 2) Submission of weekly questions on readings for discussion 3) Midterm 4) Final 5) Research Paper Required Texts: Joseph Nevins. Operation Gatekeeper: The Rise of the Illegal Alien and the Making of the U.S.-Mexico Boundary Deepa Fernandez. Targeted: Homeland Security and the Business of Immigration Kevin R. Johnson. The Huddled Masses Myth: Immigration and Civil Rights Aviva Chomsky. They Take Our Job! and 20 Other Myths About Immigration Leo Chavez. Covering Immigration: Poplar Images and the Politics of the Nation 1
Rules and Procedures Attendance/Absences: Weekly class attendance is mandatory to pass this course. Each student is allowed one unexcused absence per semester without the loss of any points. Absences due to illness (documented by a note from the LMU Student Health Center or a private physician) or participation in a LMU Sports related game or match (with documentation from your coach), and the observation of religious holidays are excused absences. Absences over the one unexcused absences will lower your grade. On the fourth absence (including the 1 free absence), the student must speak to the professor regarding their likelihood of passing the course. If you become ill or have some other emergency and cannot turn in a paper on time or take an exam on the scheduled day, you must notify the professor ahead of time. * The use of laptops, cell phones, ipods, ipads, etc. will NOT be permitted during class. Grading: Attendance- 10%, Participation- 10%, Midterm- 25%, Final- 25%, Research Paper- 30% Respect and Discussion Rules: Every student brings a different perspective to the classroom and the variety of viewpoints expressed must always be respected; we all reserve the right to respectfully disagree with one another. Discriminatory comments of any kind will not be tolerated. Citations/Footnotes: In your papers you must cite authors from whom you draw ideas/quotations. The typical style in political science is (Last Name, Year of Publication: Page) or (Winter, 1996: 118). Footnotes and endnotes are also acceptable ways of acknowledging work. In your exams it is a good idea to cite authors that we have read in the course; page numbers are obviously not required. You can use any citation style you prefer as long as it is an official style (i.e. MLA or Chicago). Plagiarism: Plagiarism is a serious offense at LMU. If we suspect that you have knowingly misrepresented someone else s work as your own, this is grounds for dismissal from the university. What constitutes misrepresentation? Obviously, purchasing a paper from the internet is one way. Failing to give credit where credit is due appropriating quotes from authors as your own or representing authors ideas as your own also constitutes plagiarism. For further information on academic integrity and plagiarism consult your university handbook. 2
In-Class Presentation, Extra Credit, & Final Paper In-Class Presentations Presenters Every Thursday two students will give a 15 minute presentation on the week s readings. The presentations are not simply summaries of the main points of the articles/chapters assigned. Presenters must critically asses what evidence is used to establish the claims the authors make, the strengths and weaknesses of their arguments, whether the presenters agree or disagree with them (and why), and how they relate to the other assigned readings. After their presentations, presenters are expected to lead class discussion for about 30 minutes. Every student must present at least once in the semester. Rest of Class Students not presenting must submit 3 questions related to the readings by 8pm on the Wednesday before discussion (unless otherwise specified, class discussions on the readings will take place every Thursday) and be ready for the professor to call on them to ask their questions and give their opinions about the various readings. 15 Page Research Paper Options (to be discussed in more detail in class) Students are expected to write a 15 page research paper on any topic (with the professor s approval) related to the politics of immigration. We will discuss what is expected from the research paper at the beginning and throughout the semester. 3
General (Im)Migration Data Sources Department of Homeland Security- www.dhs.gov Migration Policy Institute (MPI)- www.migrationpolicy.org Pew Hispanic Center- http://pewhispanic.org/ National Anti-Immigration/Immigrant Organizations Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR)- http://www.fairus.org/site/pageserver Center for Immigration Studies- http://www.cis.org/ American Patrol- http://www.americanpatrol.com/ Zero Population Growth (ZPG)- http://www.populationconnection.org/site/pageserver Americans for Legal Immigration (ALIPAC)- http://www.alipac.us/ Minuteman Civil Defense Corps- http://www.minutemanhq.com/ Minuteman Project- http://www.minutemanproject.com/ National Pro-Immigration/Immigrant Organizations National Network for Immigrant & Refugee Rights (NNIRR)- http://www.nnirr.org/ National Immigration Forum- http://www.immigrationforum.org/ Essential Workers Immigration Coalition- http://www.ewic.org/ Fair Immigration Reform Movement (FIRM)- http://standing-firm.com/ Immigration Policy Center- http://www.immigrationpolicy.org/ We Are America Alliance- http://www.weareamericaalliance.org/ Immigration Works USA- http://www.immigrationworksusa.org/index.php?p=40 Detention Watch Network- www.detentionwatchnetwork.org 4
INTRODUCTION Week 1 (Tues Aug 31)- Introduction to the Course *(NO Class on Thurs Sept 2. Political Science Faculty will be in Washington D.C. for the American Political Science Association s National Conference)* Week 2- (Tues Sept 7)- Pushed, Pulled, or Hooked? The Root-Causes of International Migration Sassen- America s Immigration Problem Globalization and Its Discontents: Essays on the New Mobility of People and Money. Sassen- Notes on the Incorporation of Third World Women into Wage Labor Through Immigration and Offshore Production. Globalization and Its Discontents: Essays on the New Mobility of People and Money. Gonzalez- The Peaceful Conquest of Mexican Migration within Mexico and to the United States. Culture of Empire: American Writers, Mexico, and Mexican Immigrants, 1880-1930. Ngai- From Colonial Subjects to Undesirable Aliens: Filipino Migration in the Invisible Empire. Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America. Grosfoguel- Migration and Geopolitics in the Greater Antilles: From the Cold War to the Post-Cold War. Colonial Subjects: Puerto Ricans in a Global Perspective. Week 3- (Tues Sept 14) A Nation By Design: Immigration Policy as Social Engineering Johnson- Chapter 1- Immigration and Civil Rights in the United States. The Huddled Masses Myth: Immigration and Civil Rights Johnson- Chapter 2- Exclusion and Deportation of Racial Minorities. The Huddled Masses Myth: Immigration and Civil Rights 5
Johnson- Chapter 3- Exclusion and Deportation of Political Undesirables. The Huddled Masses Myth: Immigration and Civil Rights Johnson- Chapter 6- The Marginalization of Women Under the Immigration and Nationality Laws The Huddled Masses Myth: Immigration and Civil Rights Johnson-Chapter 7- Exclusion and Deportation of Lesbians and Gay Men. The Huddled Masses Myth: Immigration and Civil Rights MAJOR ISSUES & POLICY DEBATES Part I Week 4- (Tues Sept 21) From Deportation Nation to Border Militarization: Immigration Enforcement Measures Nevins- Chapter 2- The Creation of the U.S.-Mexico Boundary and the Remaking of the United States and Mexico in the Border Region. Operation Gatekeeper: The Rise of the Illegal Alien and the Making of the U.S.-Mexico Boundary. Nevins- Chapter 6- The Effects and Significance of the Bounding of the United States. Operation Gatekeeper: The Rise of the Illegal Alien and the Making of the U.S.-Mexico Boundary. Fernandes- Chapter 1- The Border Crackdown. Targeted: Homeland Security and the Business of Immigration. Fernandes- Chapter 5- The Immigration-Industrial Complex: Booming Business at the Expense of Immigrant Rights? Targeted: Homeland Security and the Business of Immigration. Brotherton- Exiling New Yorkers. Keeping Out the Other: A Critical Introduction to Immigration Enforcement Today. 6
Week 5 - (Tues Sept 28) Denaturalizing Illegality : How White Illegals Got Multiple Amnesties and Brown People Without Papers Became Criminal Aliens Guskin and Wilson- Chapter 4- Why Can t They Just Get Legal? The Politics of Immigration: Questions and Answers. Guskin and Wilson- Chapter 5- Is It Easy To Be Illegal? The Politics of Immigration: Questions and Answers. De Genova- Migrant Illegality and Deportability in Everyday Life. Annual Review of Anthropology. Vol. 31, 2002. Nevins- Chapter 5- The Ideological Roots of the Illegal : The Other As Threat and the Rise of the Boundary as the Symbol of Protection. Spener- Global Apartheid, Coyotaje, and the Discourse of Clandestine Migration: Distinctions Between Personal, Structural, and Cultural Violence. Migration and Development. Vol. 10, 2008. *Week 6- MIDTERM EXAM (In-Class Review on Tues Oct 5, Exam on Thurs Oct 7) Week 7- (Tues Oct 12) How the Politics of Immigration is Lived Movie: Farmingville: Welcome to the suburbs, home of the new border wars MAJOR ISSUES & POLICY DEBATES Part II Week 8- (Tues Oct 19) American = White?: Assimilation and its Discontents Chomsky- Myth 10. The United States is a melting pot that has always welcomed immigrants from all over the world. 7
Chomsky- Myth 11. Since we are all the descendents of immigrants here, we all start on equal footing. Rumbaut- Assimilation and Its Discontents: Ironies and Paradoxes. Handbook of International Migration. 1999. 174-185pp. Blauner- Chapter 4- Colonized and Immigrant Minorities. Still the Big News: Racial Oppression in America. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2001. Huntington- The Hispanic Challenge. Foreign Policy. No. 141. Mar-Apr. 2004. Citrin et al.- Testing Huntington: Is Hispanic Immigration a Threat to American Identity? Perspectives on Politics. March 2007. Week 9- (Tues Oct 26) No Taxation Without Representation: Immigrants & the Economy (In-Class Debate Thurs Oct 28) *Readings (To Be Discussed on Tues Oct 26): Guskin and Wilson- Chapter 6- Are Immigrants Hurting Our Economy? Chomsky-Part One- Immigrants and the Economy. Milkman- Chapter 3- Turning the Clock Back: Anti-Union Reaction, the Return of the Sweatshop, and the New Immigration. L.A. Story: Immigrant Workers and the Future of the U.S. Labor Movement. New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2006. Raphael & Ronconi- Reconciling National and Regional Estimates of the Effects of Immigration on U.S. Labor Markets: The Confounding Effects of Native Male Incarceration Trends. Myers- Thinking Ahead About Our Immigrant Future: New Trends and Mutual Benefits in Our Aging Society. Immigration Policy In Focus. January 2008. Week 10- (Tues Nov 2) Racialized Nativism & the Modern Anti-Immigrant Movement Sanchez- Face the Nation: Race, Immigration, and the Rise of Nativism in Late Twentieth Century America 8
Chavez- Chapter 3- Toward a Framework for Reading Magazine Covers Chavez- Chapter 4- A Lexicon of Images, Icons, and Metaphors for a Discourse on Immigration and the Nation Chavez- Chapter 8- Manufacturing Consensus on an Anti-Mexican Immigration Discourse. Mock- Immigration Backlash: Hate Crimes Against Latinos Flourish. Intelligence Report. No. 128. Winter 2007. http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligencereport/browse-all-issues/2007/winter/immigration-backlash Potok- Rage on the Right Intelligence Report. No. 137. Spring 2010. http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-report/browse-allissues/2010/spring/rage-on-the-right Week 11 (Tues Nov. 9) Ilegal Y Que?! Immigrant Activism and Political Participation Batra. Organizing in the South Asian Domestic Worker Community: Pushing Boundaries of the Law and Organizing Project. The New Urban Immigrant Workforce. Milkman and Wong- Organizing Immigrant Workers: Case Studies from Southern California. Rekindling the Movement: Labor s Quest for Relevance in the 21 st Century. Hayduk- The Case for Immigrant Voting. Democracy for All: Restoring Immigrant Voting Rights. Zepeda-Millán- Today We March, Tomorrow We Vote: The Effects of the 2006 Immigrant Rights Protest-Wave. Week 12 (Tues Nov 16) Border Battles in Action Movie: Walking The Line 9
Week 13- (Tues Nov 23) Other Issues for Future Research (NO CLASS Thurs Nov 25 Thanksgiving Break) Fox- Unpacking Transnational Citizenship. Annual Review of Political Science. Vol. 8. 2005. Luibheid- Introduction Queering Migration and Citizenship. Queer Migrations: Sexuality, U.S. Citizenship, and Border Crossings. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2005. Johnson- Chapter 1- A Call for Truly Comprehensive U.S. Immigration Reform. Opening the Floodgates: Why America Needs to Rethink Its Borders and Immigration laws, 2007. Andreas- Chapter 6- Policing the External Borders of the New Europe Paskeviciute & Anderson- Immigrants, Citizenship, & Political Action in Europe Week 14 (Tues Nov 30) Presentations Part I Week 15 - (Tues Dec 7) Presentations Part II *(Last Week of Classes Final Papers Due)* Week 16 - (Tues Dec 14) FINAL EXAM 10