Title: Immigrant Naturalization and Immigrant Settlement
1Immigrant Naturalization and Immigrant Settlement
- Political Science 61 / Chicano/Latino Studies 64
- November 29, 2007
2Exam
- Second exam December 6, 2007
- In class
- Not cumulative, but you can bring examples from
the first half of class - Goals
- Analysis and comparison essay
- Reward for careful reading of assigned readings
identifications - Balance between sections
- Essay question in advance?
3From Last Time
- Immigration Reform and the Opportunities for
Cross-Group Alliances
4Short-Term Goal of Protests Met
- Criminalization provisions of HR 4437 quickly
left the debate - at some cost
- 700 miles of wall authorized
- 4.4 billion (most not appropriated)
- Also, took key mobilizing issue from protest
organizers - Low turnout in May 1, 2007 protests
5Long-Term Significance Great For Latino Community
- Positive Legalization
- Engine of empowerment and electoral growth
- Provides added protections for U.S.-born family
members - Negative Legally recognized temporary status
- The longer it continues, the more it creates a
legal underclass that becomes central to the
economy (and shifts the position of capital in
immigration debates) - The more it is likely to divide Mexican
America/Latino communities internally
6Issue Less Salient in Asian American Communities
- Smaller share of Asian immigrant population is
unauthorized - Unauthorized population composed differently
- Short-term visa over-stayers
- Indentured labor
- New point system would benefit higher share of
potential Asian immigrants
7Also, Not Likely to Build Alliances with African
Americans
- Leadership of African American organizations
- See immigration as a civil rights issue
- Generally supportive of reform
- At the mass level
- Support less clear
- Economic cost of immigration paid
disproportionately by low-skilled urban workers - Growth in Latino population reduces Black
electoral power at the local level (remember
readings on Villaraigosa mayoral races)
8Conclusions
- Advocates of various reforms increasingly seeing
status quo as better than change - Enforcement advocates fear legalization as a
lesson for the future - Legalization advocates fear new enforcement,
fines, touchback, and bureaucratic requirements - Business leaders see that enforcement remains
sporadic (so they dont have to fear loss of
labor) - People who pay price for status quo 12 million
unauthorized immigrants
9Todays Lecture
- Immigrant Naturalization and Immigrant Settlement
10Naturalization Primarily Issue for Latinos /
Asian Americans
- Percent of adult citizens who are naturalized
(2004) - Anglo 2.6
- Black 3.8
- Latino 24.8 (3.3 million)
- Asian American 62.3 (2.9 million)
- Total number of naturalized citizens (2005) 14.9
million
11Percent Citizen and Non-Citizen Among Adults
(2004)
12Naturalization Steadily on the Increase
- Lagged response to increase in immigration after
1965 immigration act - Not a linear increase however (doesnt keep up
with immigration) - Threats generally increase demand for
naturalization - Proposition 187/Welfare Reform in mid-1990s
- HR 4437 and anti-immigrant rhetoric today
- Community resources to help immigrants naturalize
also increase in these periods - Naturalization will stay high for foreseeable
future - But, 8 million eligible immigrants have not
naturalized
13Naturalization, 1976-2005
14Naturalization Opportunities and Barriers
- Immigrants perspectives
- Do immigrants want to naturalize?
- Why do immigrants interested in naturalization
not naturalize? - Government perspective
- Who should be offered citizenship?
- What characteristics should they have?
15Do Immigrants Want to Naturalize?
- Best evidence answer is yes
- Just 15 percent of all Latino adults report no
interest in naturalizing - Among eligible Latino immigrants
- 8.7 percent say naturalization not very
important - 3.8 percent say naturalization not at all
important - No reliable attitudinal data on Asian immigrants,
but - Asians immigrants who naturalize do so soon after
they become eligible
16Behavioral Evidence
- Latino immigrants
- Approximately, 2/3 of eligible have done
something concrete to naturalize - Taking English classes to prepare for exam
- Taking civics classes to prepare for exam
- Yet, only half of those who try, succeed
17Why the Gap?
- Confusion
- Fear of consequences of failure
- Concern about loss of home-country citizenship
- Bureaucracy
- Form complex
- INS/BCIS impenetrable
- Bureaucracy expects steady flow of applicants,
immigrants apply in response to threats - Cost
- Absence of community-level assistance
- Naturalization works best as a community-wide
experience
18Who Should be Offered Citizenship?
- Statute
- Five years legal residence
- Not limited by gender after 1922, race/ethnicity
after 1952 - Required skills/characteristics
- 1790 good moral character
- 1795 renounce former allegiances
- 1906 speaking knowledge of English
- 1950 reading and writing knowledge of English
19Statute Isnt the Primary Barrier, Implementation
Is
- Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) /
Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services
(BCIS) - Decentralized
- N / S often gets lost to enforcement
functions - Not antagonistic, but also not helpful
- Doesnt respond well to pressure
20Naturalization Overview
- Immigrants interested in pursuing citizenship
- Many more start than finish
- Formal requirements relatively minimal
- But they have steadily increased in the 20th
Century - U.S. government doesnt promote citizenship and
INS/BCIS hinders
21Immigrant Settlement Does Government Play a Role?
- Yes
- Education, a resource for young immigrants and
the second generation - English as a Second Language (outside California)
- Non-needs-based social-welfare programs and
insurance programs - and No
- Immigrants excluded from many needs-based social
welfare programs after 1996 - Limited support for naturalization promotion
22U.S. Comparison to Other Immigrant-Receiving
Countries
- Somewhere in the middle
- Canada
- State promotion of multiculturalism
- State encouragement of naturalization
- Immigrants eligible for government assistance
programs - Germany
- Difficult for immigrants to naturalize
- Children of guest-workers not eligible for
citizenship - Immigrant financial assistance only for ethnic
Germans
23Settlement Policy
- U.S. has never thought comprehensively about
developing policy to incorporate new immigrants - Left largely to the states and, mostly to the
private sector - Liberal naturalization policy and civil rights,
otherwise sink or swim - Opportunity to link the interests of Latinos and
Asian Americans (and other immigrant/ethnic
populations)
24What Would this Policy Arena Look Like?
- Needed resources for incorporation
- Adult English language training
- Job training/re-training
- Short-term voting rights
- Revisit 1996 Welfare Reform
- Promotion of dual-citizenship
- Tensions
- Cost
- Native-born American perception that their
ancestors made it on their own and todays
immigrants should also - Link between citizenship and voting rights
25Costs of Neglect High
- Multigenerational failure to incorporate
immigrants and their children - Europe is now facing
- Consequence in U.S. potentially much higher
because of size and diversity of immigrant
population - Unintentional resource for intergenerational
immigrant incorporation 14th Amendment - U.S.-born children of immigrants are citizens
regardless of parents status
26For Next Time
- Please bring a possible ID from the readings
since the midterm to class - Marta Tienda and her colleagues speak of the
Hispanic future (and, by extension, the minority
future) as an uncertain destiny. - Why?
- What public policies need to be implemented today
to ensure that uncertain becomes an empowered
future?