Description

Book Synopsis
Since its founding, the US has struggled with issues of federalism and states' rights. This book explores the complicated and complicating role of the states in immigration policy and enforcement, including voices from both sides of the debate.

Trade Review
A new collection of essaysStrange Neighborsshines a much needed light on state immigration activities and reveals that the federal governments impressive power over migrants lives is only one part of the story. * Crimmigration.com *
In Arizona v. United States (2012), the Supreme Court delivered a landmark ruling that invalidated core provisions of Arizonas S.B. 1070, the controversial state immigration enforcement law that was a model for many states and localities seeking to buttress, and arguably expand on, federal immigration enforcement efforts. Strange Neighbors is one of the first book-length inquiries into the efforts by state and local governments to regulate immigration. With an insightful introduction by Jack Chin and Carissa Byrne Hessick, the book explains the emergence of state and local immigration enforcement laws, the historical antecedents to those laws, provide vigorous defenses of state and local immigration regulation by two of their most prominent advocates, and offer critical evaluations of the state and local efforts to regulate immigration. The authors of the chapters are leaders in the field and authors of some of the most exciting immigration law scholarship being published today. It goes without saying that Strange Neighbors is a 'must read' for anyone interested in immigration enforcement in the twenty-first century. -- Kevin R. Johnson,Dean, UC Davis School of Law
The essays in Strange Neighbors provide new and timely insights into decades of debates about how laws, generated by state, local, and federal governments, create or mitigate the impact of national borders on millions of peoplein and outside of the United States. -- Judith Resnik,Arthur Liman Professor of Law, Yale Law School
This book provides context, perspective, and the reasoning behind both sides positions. That makes it a valuable resource for anyone seriously interested in gaining a fuller and more nuanced understanding of the debate over federal and states rights in the immigration realm. * The Federal Lawyer *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments IntroductionGabriel J. Chin and Carissa Byrne HessickI. The Recent Spate of State and Local Immigration Regulation 1. Measuring the Climate for Immigrants: A State-by-State AnalysisHuyen Pham and Pham Hoang Van 2. How Arizona Became Ground Zero in the War on 40 ImmigrantsDouglas S. MasseyII. Historical Antecedents to the Modern State and Local Efforts to Regulate Immigration 3. "A War to Keep Alien Labor out of Colorado": The "Mexican Menace" and the Historical Origins of Local and State Anti-Immigration InitiativesTom I. Romero IIIII. A Defense of State and Local Efforts 4. Reinforcing the Rule of Law: What States Can and Should Do to Reduce Illegal ImmigrationKris W. Kobach 5. The States Enter the Illegal Immigration Fray John C. EastmanIV. A Critical Evaluation of the New State Regulation 6. Broken Mirror: The Unconstitutional Foundations of New State Immigration EnforcementGabriel J. Chin and Marc L. Miller 7. The Role of States in the National Conversation on ImmigrationRick Su 8. Post-Racial Proxy Battles over Immigration Mary FanAbout the ContributorsIndex

Strange Neighbors The Role of States in

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A Hardback by Carissa Byrne Hessick, Gabriel J. Chin

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    View other formats and editions of Strange Neighbors The Role of States in by Carissa Byrne Hessick

    Publisher: New York University Press
    Publication Date: 23/05/2014
    ISBN13: 9780814737804, 978-0814737804
    ISBN10: 0814737803

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Since its founding, the US has struggled with issues of federalism and states' rights. This book explores the complicated and complicating role of the states in immigration policy and enforcement, including voices from both sides of the debate.

    Trade Review
    A new collection of essaysStrange Neighborsshines a much needed light on state immigration activities and reveals that the federal governments impressive power over migrants lives is only one part of the story. * Crimmigration.com *
    In Arizona v. United States (2012), the Supreme Court delivered a landmark ruling that invalidated core provisions of Arizonas S.B. 1070, the controversial state immigration enforcement law that was a model for many states and localities seeking to buttress, and arguably expand on, federal immigration enforcement efforts. Strange Neighbors is one of the first book-length inquiries into the efforts by state and local governments to regulate immigration. With an insightful introduction by Jack Chin and Carissa Byrne Hessick, the book explains the emergence of state and local immigration enforcement laws, the historical antecedents to those laws, provide vigorous defenses of state and local immigration regulation by two of their most prominent advocates, and offer critical evaluations of the state and local efforts to regulate immigration. The authors of the chapters are leaders in the field and authors of some of the most exciting immigration law scholarship being published today. It goes without saying that Strange Neighbors is a 'must read' for anyone interested in immigration enforcement in the twenty-first century. -- Kevin R. Johnson,Dean, UC Davis School of Law
    The essays in Strange Neighbors provide new and timely insights into decades of debates about how laws, generated by state, local, and federal governments, create or mitigate the impact of national borders on millions of peoplein and outside of the United States. -- Judith Resnik,Arthur Liman Professor of Law, Yale Law School
    This book provides context, perspective, and the reasoning behind both sides positions. That makes it a valuable resource for anyone seriously interested in gaining a fuller and more nuanced understanding of the debate over federal and states rights in the immigration realm. * The Federal Lawyer *

    Table of Contents
    Acknowledgments IntroductionGabriel J. Chin and Carissa Byrne HessickI. The Recent Spate of State and Local Immigration Regulation 1. Measuring the Climate for Immigrants: A State-by-State AnalysisHuyen Pham and Pham Hoang Van 2. How Arizona Became Ground Zero in the War on 40 ImmigrantsDouglas S. MasseyII. Historical Antecedents to the Modern State and Local Efforts to Regulate Immigration 3. "A War to Keep Alien Labor out of Colorado": The "Mexican Menace" and the Historical Origins of Local and State Anti-Immigration InitiativesTom I. Romero IIIII. A Defense of State and Local Efforts 4. Reinforcing the Rule of Law: What States Can and Should Do to Reduce Illegal ImmigrationKris W. Kobach 5. The States Enter the Illegal Immigration Fray John C. EastmanIV. A Critical Evaluation of the New State Regulation 6. Broken Mirror: The Unconstitutional Foundations of New State Immigration EnforcementGabriel J. Chin and Marc L. Miller 7. The Role of States in the National Conversation on ImmigrationRick Su 8. Post-Racial Proxy Battles over Immigration Mary FanAbout the ContributorsIndex

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