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E-grāmata: Fictive Kinship: Family Reunification and the Meaning of Race and Nation in American Immigration

  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Jul-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Backbeat UK
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781610448123
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Jul-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Backbeat UK
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781610448123
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Today, roughly 70 percent of all visas for legal immigration are reserved for family members of permanent residents or American citizens. Family reunification—policies that seek to preserve family unity during or following migration—is a central pillar of current immigration law, but it has existed in some form in American statutes since at least the mid-nineteenth century. InFictive Kinship, sociologist Catherine Lee delves into the fascinating history of family reunification to examine how and why our conceptions of family have shaped immigration, the meaning of race, and the way we see ourselves as a country.

Drawing from a rich set of archival sources, Fictive Kinship shows that even the most draconian anti-immigrant laws, such as the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, contained provisions for family unity, albeit for a limited class of immigrants. Arguments for uniting families separated by World War II and the Korean War also shaped immigration debates and the policies that led to the landmark 1965 Immigration Act. Lee argues that debating the contours of family offers a ready set of symbols and meanings to frame national identity and to define who counts as one of us.” Talk about family, however, does not inevitably lead to more liberal immigration policies. Welfare reform in the 1990s, for example, placed limits on benefits for immigrant families, and recent debates over the children of undocumented immigrants fanned petitions to rescind birthright citizenship.Fictive Kinship shows that the centrality of family unity in the immigration discourse often limits the discussion about the goals, functions and roles of immigration and prevents a broader definition of American identity.

Too often, studies of immigration policy focus on individuals or particular ethnic or racial groups. With its original and wide-ranging inquiry,Fictive Kinship shifts the analysis in immigration studies toward the family, a largely unrecognized but critical component in the regulation of immigrants’ experience in America.

Tables
ix
About the Author xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Note on Terminology xvii
Chapter 1 Introduction: "Family Reunification Has Been the Cornerstone of Our Immigration Policy"
1(18)
Chapter 2 "The Fabric of Our Civilization as We Know It": Family in Research and Policy
19(30)
Chapter 3 "I Have Kept My Blood Pure": Gender Propriety, Class Privilege, and Racial Purity in Family Reunification During the Exclusion Era
49(25)
Chapter 4 "Reason of Elemental Humanity": The Urgency of Uniting Families in the Postwar Era on the Road to Immigration Reform
74(25)
Chapter 5 "Our Nation's Efforts to Protect Families Has Fallen Far Short": Pluralist Ideals and Vulnerable Families
99(21)
Chapter 6 Conclusion: "What Basis Do We Use to Decide Who Gets to Come?"
120(7)
Appendix: Data and Methods 127(2)
Notes 129(24)
References 153(20)
Index 173