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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Race and the Response of State Legislatures to Unauthorized Immigrants

TLDR
It is found that economic indicators, crime rates, and demographic changes have little explanatory value for legislation aimed at restrictions on immigrant populations, and ideological framing is the most consistently important factor determining legislative responses to newcomers.
Abstract
Increasingly, state legislatures are enacting laws to regulate immigrant populations. What accounts for these responses to foreign-born residents? To explain legislative activity at the state level, the authors examine a variety of factors, including the size and growth of foreign-born and Hispanic local populations, economic well-being, crime rates, and conservative or liberal political ideology in state government and among the citizenry. The authors find that economic indicators, crime rates, and demographic changes have little explanatory value for legislation aimed at restrictions on immigrant populations. Rather, conservative citizen ideology appears to drive immigrant-related restrictionist state legislation. Meanwhile, proimmigrant laws are associated with larger Hispanic concentrations, growing foreign-born populations, and more liberal citizen and governmental orientations. These findings suggest that ideological framing is the most consistently important factor determining legislative responses...

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The “Local” Migration State: The Site-Specific Devolution of Immigration Enforcement in the U.S. South

TL;DR: The authors examines the implementation of 287(g) authority and Secure Communities by several law enforcement agencies in Wake County and Durham County, North Carolina, and concludes that despite being federally supervised programs, they take shape within specific political, legal, policing, and biographic contexts, and, as such, take on a site-specific form.
Journal ArticleDOI

What We Know About Unauthorized Migration

TL;DR: A review of recent work on unauthorized migration can be found in this paper, where the authors reveal a new complexity in the unauthorized migration in the early twenty-first century, compared with the past.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Multilayered Jurisdictional Patchwork: Immigration Federalism in the United States

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the immigration-related demands currently being placed on local police in the United States, and the emergence of what they call a "multilayered jurisdictional patchwork" of immigration enforcement.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Multilayered Jurisdictional Patchwork: Immigration Federalism in the United States

TL;DR: This paper focused on the immigration-related demands currently being placed on local police in the United States and the emergence of what they call a "multilayered jurisdictional patchwork" of immigration enforcement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anti-immigrant Anxieties in State Policy The Great Recession and Punitive Immigration Policy in the American States, 2005–2012

TL;DR: The Great Recession of late 2007 through 2009 had profound negative economic impacts on the U.S. states, with 49 states experiencing revenue decreases in their 2009 budgets representing more than $1 billion.
References
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Book

Folk Devils and Moral Panics

TL;DR: Cohen's Folk Devils and Moral Panics as mentioned in this paperolk devils and moral panics is an outstanding investigation of the way the media and often those in a position of political power define a condition, or group, as a threat to societal values and interests.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring Citizen and Government Ideology in the American States, 1960-93

TL;DR: In this article, the authors construct dynamic measures of the ideology of a state's citizens and political leaders, using the roll call voting scores of state congressional delegations, the outcomes of congressional elections, the partisan division of state legislatures, the party of the governor, and various assumptions regarding voters and state political elites.
Book

Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America

Mae M. Ngai
TL;DR: In this paper, illegal aliens: A Problem of Law and History is defined as "a problem of law and history" where the goal is to "make and unmake of illegal aliens".
Journal ArticleDOI

Liminal legality: Salvadoran and Guatemalan immigrants' lives in the United States

TL;DR: The authors examines the effects of uncertain legal status on the lives of immigrants, situating their experiences within frameworks of citizenship/belonging and segmented assimilation, and using Victor Turner's concept of liminality and Susan Coutin's "legal nonexistence."
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