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arno tausch
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Mark Krikorian [mailto:msk@cis.org]
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 18. April 2002 21:44
An: CISNEWS@cis.org
Betreff: Immigration reading, 4/18/02
[For CISNEWS subscribers --
GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS
1. Recent testimony from the House Judiciary Committee
2. New from the Executive Office for Immigration Review
3. Report from the U.S. General Accounting Office
4. "The changing face of Chicago: Demographic trends in the 1990's"
REPORTS AND ARTICLES
5. Refugee Reports
6. Recent reports from the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA)
7. "Migration Consequences of Welfare Reform"
8. "Immigrant and Native Responses to Welfare Reform"
9. "Are there Ethnic Enclaves/Ghettos in English Cities?"
10. "Engineered Migration as a Coercive Instrument: The 1994 Cuban Balseros
Crisis"
11. "Spatial Job Search...Competition Among Immigrant and Native Groups in
L.A."
12. "Immigration and Regional Comparative Advantage in the Apparel Industry"
13. "Access for Foreign-Trained IT Professionals: An Exploration of
Systemic Barriers to Employment"
BOOKS
14. "The Mobility of Workers Under Advanced Capitalism"
15. "The Mercy Factory: Refugees and the American Asylum System"
16. "Migration, Transnationalization, and Race in a Changing New York"
17. "Mary Lou and John Tanton: A Journey Into American Conservation"
18. "...The Relation of Social Organizations, Global Capital and
Governments With International Immigration in Spain...Portugal"
19. "Immigration and the Economy of Hong Kong"
20. "Qu'est-ce qu'un Français?"
JOURNALS
21. International Journal of Refugee Law
22. Bender's Immigration Bulletin
23. The Social Contract
24. Ethnic and Racial Studies
25. Journal of Intercultural Studies
26. Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
27. International Journal of Migration Studies
28. Migration Societe
29. Estudios Migratorios Latinoamericanos
-- Mark Krikorian]
1.
"Restructuring the INSHow the Agency's Dysfunctional Structure Impedes the
Performance of its Dual Mission"
House of Representatives Judiciary Committee oversight hearing, April 9,
2002
WITNESS LIST:
James Ziglar, acting INS commissioner
http://www.house.gov/judiciary/ziglar040902.htm
Richard Gallo, National president of the Federal Law Enforcement Officers
Association (FLEOA)
http://www.house.gov/judiciary/gallo040902.htm
Susan Martin, director of the Institute for the Study of International
Migration, Georgetown University
http://www.house.gov/judiciary/martin040902.htm
Lawrence Gonzalez, Washington director of the National Association of
Latino Elected and Appointed Officials (NALEO) Educational Fund
http://www.house.gov/judiciary/gonzalez040902.htm
Dan Stein, Executive Director of the Federation for American Immigration
Reform
http://www.house.gov/judiciary/stein040902.htm
********
********
2.
New from the Executive Office for Immigration Review:
2001 asylum statistics, by nationality, for cases received by immigration
judges (which is different from asylum cases received by the INS):
http://www.usdoj.gov/eoir/efoia/FY01AsyStats.pdf
********
********
3.
New from the U.S. General Accounting Office:
INS Forensic Document Laboratory
Several Factors Impeded Timeliness of Case Processing
GAO-02-410, March 2002
http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d02410.pdf
********
********
4.
The changing face of Chicago: Demographic trends in the 1990's
By Kenneth M. Johnson
Chicago Fed Letter (Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago), April 2002, No. 176
The population of the Chicago metropolitan area grew by 869,000 (11.6%)
between 1990 and 2000, the largest decade of growth in 30 years. The gain
of 112,000 in the City of Chicago was the first in more than 50
years. Overall, gains were greatest in the outer suburbs and smallest in
the city. Much of this growth was fueled by immigration and natural
increase, with Hispanics contributing disproportionately to both.
. . .
http://www.chicagofed.org/publications/fedletter/2002/cflapr2002_176.pdf
********
********
5.
Refugee Reports, March 2002
http://www.refugeesusa.org/store/individual1.cfm?item_id=1706
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
* Steve Edminster reports on the resumption of U.S. refugee resettlement
from the Middle East
* Maureen Contreni reports on Attorney General John Ashcroft's proposal to
streamline the immigration appeal process
* Melanie Nezer reports on legislation directed at monitoring U.S. borders
and controlling border traffic
* Margaret Emery reports on an immigration bill that would alter a
long-criticized aspect of Germany's refugee policy
********
********
6.
Recent Discussion Papers from the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) in
Bonn:
"Natives, the Foreign-Born and High School Equivalents: New Evidence on the
Returns to the GED"
By Melissa Clark and David A. Jaeger
Discussion Paper No. 477
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), April 2002
ftp://ftp.iza.org/dps/dp477.pdf
+++
"Labor Market Incorporation of Immigrants in Japan and the United States: A
Comparative Analysis"
By Wayne A. Cornelius and Takeyuki Tsuda
Discussion Paper No. 476
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), April 2002
ftp://ftp.iza.org/dps/dp476.pdf
+++
"A Macroeconomic Experiment in Mass Immigration"
By Zvi Hercowitz and Eran Yashiv
Discussion Paper No. 475
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), April 2002
ftp://ftp.iza.org/dps/dp475.pdf
+++
"Immigrants' Language Skills and Visa Category"
By Barry R. Chiswick, Yew Liang Lee, and Paul W. Miller
Discussion Paper No. 471
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), April 2002
ftp://ftp.iza.org/dps/dp471.pdf
+++
"Are Immigrants Competing with Natives in the Italian Labour Market?"
The Employment Effect
By Alessandra Venturini and Claudia Villosio
Discussion Paper No. 467
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), April 2002
ftp://ftp.iza.org/dps/dp467.pdf
+++
"The Determinants of the Geographic Concentration among Immigrants:
Application to Australia"
By Barry R. Chiswick, Yew Liang Lee, and Paul W. Miller
Discussion Paper No. 462
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), March 2002
ftp://ftp.iza.org/dps/dp462.pdf
+++
"Family Matters: The Role of the Family in Immigrants' Destination Language
Acquistion"
By Barry R. Chiswick, Yew Liang Lee, and Paul W. Miller
Discussion Paper No. 460
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), March 2002
ftp://ftp.iza.org/dps/dp460.pdf
+++
"Longitudinal Analysis of Immigrant Occupational Mobility: A Test of the
Immigrant Assimilation Hypothesis"
By Barry R. Cheswick, Yew Liang Lee, and Paul W. Miller
Discussion Paper No. 452
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), March 2002
ftp://ftp.iza.org/dps/dp452.pdf
+++
"The Complemetarity of Language and Other Human Capital: Immigrant Earnings
in Canada"
By Barry R. Cheswick and Paul W. Miller
Discussion Paper No. 451
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), March 2002
ftp://ftp.iza.org/dps/dp451.pdf
+++
"Do Enclaves Matter in Immigrant Adjustment?"
By Barry R. Cheswick and Paul W. Miller
Discussion Paper No. 449
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), March 2002
ftp://ftp.iza.org/dps/dp449.pdf
+++
"Evaluating Immigration Policy Potentials and Limitations"
By Michael Fertig
Discussion Paper No. 437
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), March 2002
ftp://ftp.iza.org/dps/dp437.pdf
+++
"Protective or Counter-Productive?: Labor Market Institutions and the
Effect of Immigration on EU Natives"
By Joshua D. Angrist and Adriana D. Kugler
Discussion Paper No. 433
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), February 2002
ftp://ftp.iza.org/dps/dp433.pdf
+++
"Immigration and Heterogeneous Labor in Western Germany: A Labour Market
Classification Based on Nonparametric Estimation"
By Markus Frolich and Patrick A. Puhani
Discussion Paper No. 418
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), January 2002
ftp://ftp.iza.org/dps/dp418.pdf
********
********
7.
Migration Consequences of Welfare Reform
Working Paper Number 8560
By Robert Kaestner, Neeraj Kaushal, Gregg Van Ryzin
The NBER (National Bureau of Economic Research), October 2001
http://papers.nber.org/papers/W8560
In this paper, we investigate whether or not recent state and federal
changes in welfare policy -- the imposition of time-limited benefits, the
use of financial sanctions for non-compliance, and the setting of strict
work eligibility rules -- affect the migration of low-educated unmarried
women. Estimates of welfare's effect on migration reveal that welfare
policy does indeed affect migration. Recent changes in policy that have
made public assistance a less attractive alternative are associated with
greater migration among low-educated unmarried women. Welfare reform has
motivated low-educated women to move greater distances more frequently, and
to combine such moves with employment. Estimates also indicate that welfare
reform is associated with more local (i.e., within county) changes in
residential location that are associated with employment, although
estimates of this effect were not robust to estimation method. The close
link between residential moves and employment in the post-reform period is
consistent with the idea that welfare reform has motivated people to move
for economic reasons such as better employment opportunities. This evidence
suggests that the traditional way of thinking about the effect of welfare
on migration -- as a strategic move to obtain higher benefits -- is
inadequate.
********
********
8.
Immigrant and Native Responses to Welfare Reform
Working Paper Number 8541
By Robert Kaestner and Neeraj Kaushal
The NBER (National Bureau of Economic Research) , March 2002
http://papers.nber.org/papers/W8541
In this paper, we investigate the effect of federal welfare reform on the
employment, hours of work and marriage rates of three groups of
low-educated women: foreign-born citizens, foreign-born non-citizens and
native-born citizens. Among non-citizens, we investigate whether the
behavioral response to welfare reform differed by recency of immigration.
Finally, because some states created programs to insure that all legal
immigrants remained eligible for benefits under the Temporary Assistance to
Needy Families (TANF) program and others did not, we compare the response
of foreign-born non-citizens between these states to investigate whether
the immigrant provisions of federal welfare reform legislation had a
'chilling' effect. The results suggest that welfare reform induced
native-born citizens and foreign- born non-citizens to increase their
employment and attachment to the labor market. TANF appears to have had a
larger effect on the least educated native-born women and among
foreign-born non-citizens, a larger effect on more recent arrivals. The
'chilling' hypothesis that has received so much attention in the popular
press is not supported by our results. Finally, our estimates indicate that
TANF had no effect on native- and foreign-born citizens' marriage
decisions. TANF was associated with a decrease in the marriage rates of
foreign-born non-citizens.
********
********
9.
Are there Ethnic Enclaves/Ghettos in English Cities?
By Ron Johnston, James Forrest, and Michael Poulsen
Urban Studies, Volume 39, Number 4, April 1, 2002
http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/app/home/contribution.asp?wasp=3n25rlv
xulv5lu7pnqt1&referrer=parent&backto=issue,1,13;journal,1,80
ABSTRACT: The residential segregation of ethnic groups in urban areas
remains an issue of importance for policy-making in multicultural
societies, such as England's, with levels of segregation frequently linked
to questions of social exclusion and equal treatment. But how segregated
are ethnic groups in England? Most studies answer this question using
single indices which address one aspect only of a multidimensional concept.
In this paper, an alternative approach is used which identifies residential
area types according to the degree of ethnic mixing; we evaluate their
relative importance in 18 English cities in the light of Boal and Peach's
arguments regarding the processes and patterns involved in segregation. We
find little evidence of significant segregation of Black ethnic groups, but
more with regard to Asian groups - especially outside London.
********
********
10.
Engineered Migration as a Coercive Instrument: The 1994 Cuban Balseros
Crisis
By Kelly M. Greenhill
The Rosemarie Rogers Working Paper Series #12
The Inter-University Committee on International Migration, February 2002
http://web.mit.edu/cis/www/migration/Greenhill_rrwp_12.html
********
********
11.
Spatial Job Search and Job Competition Among Immigrant and Native Groups in
Los Angeles
By Michael A. Stoll, Edwin Melendez, Abel Valenzuela Jr
Regional Studies, Volume 36, Number 2, April 2002
http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/link.asp?id=JUNVYNFXGLKVL6L7
This paper examines the effect of immigrant job searchers on the employment
and wages of native and immigrant groups in Los Angeles. Using data from
the 1994 Los Angeles Survey of Urban Inequality (LASUI), we use variation
in the spatial job search patterns of immigrant groups to estimate the
effect of immigrant job searchers on natives' labour market outcomes.
First, the results indicate that the spatial job search patterns of native
and immigrant groups are positively correlated, although the spatial job
search patterns of immigrant groups are more strongly correlated than those
between immigrant and native groups. Second, our results show a negative
influence of immigrants on the employment of more skilled native whites and
on the employment and wages of less-skilled native blacks in blue-collar
occupations. We also find both positive and negative immigrant effects on
the employment and wages of immigrant groups.
********
********
12.
Immigration and Regional Comparative Advantage in the Apparel Industry
Richard V. Adkisson
International Trade Journal, Volume 16, Number 1, 2002
http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/link.asp?id=CHMPN22Q0MQLY9GN
********
********
13.
Access for Foreign-Trained IT Professionals: An Exploration of Systemic
Barriers to Employment
(By Canadian organziations JobStart and Skills for Change)
March 2002
http://www.skillsforchange.org/library/downloads/access_report.pdf
********
********
14.
The Mobility of Workers Under Advanced Capitalism
Dominican Migration to the United States
By Ramona Hernandez
Columbia University Press, 200 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN 0231116225, $49.50
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0231116225/centerforimmgra/002-119916
4-3779033
Paperback, ISBN 0231116233, $18.50
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0231116233/centerforimmgra/002-119916
4-3779033
PUBLISHER'S DESCRIPTION: Workers migrating from one place to another has
always been explained by one of two macroeconomic paradigms. The
equilibrium theory views the migration process as the result of the
individual worker's own rational choice. The historical-structural theory
emphasizes macro socioeconomic changes that are beyond the worker's control
and forces them to migrate. Using the Dominican labor force in New York,
the author argues that: (1) the post-1965 migration of surplus labor force
from the sending society to the host country did not always mean that it
was needed or wanted, (2) emigration from the Dominican Republic was the
result of a de facto government policy to have people leave, (3) the United
States participated in this de facto policy to rid the Dominican Republic
of individuals opposed to US economic interests and political dissidents
and (4) the traditional correlation between migration and economic progress
does not always hold true. The author provides an understanding of the
Dominican people in the United States and their interaction with other
groups.
********
********
15.
The Mercy Factory
Refugees and the American Asylum System
By Christopher J. Einolf
Ivan R. Dee, Publisher
Hardback, 288 pp., ISBN 1-56663-400-8, $19.25
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1566634008/centerforimmgra/002-119916
4-3779033
PUBLISHER'S DESCRIPTION: Each year thousands of people come to the United
States seeking protection-more than 62,000 applied for asylum in 1998
alone. America is a country of immigrants with a proud tradition of
welcoming refugees from persecution. Yet most Americans object to high
levels of illegal immigration, and many feel that poor immigrants are a
burden to the society. These conflicting views are played out in a complex
system of asylum adjudication that has developed over the last twenty
years. The Mercy Factory is the first book to examine that system. It does
so by telling the stories of five refugees, following them from their
experience of persecution in their home countries to their arrival in the
United States and their progress through the barriers of the American
immigration legal system. The stories are both tragic and inspiring, but
they also illuminate the workings of the asylum system and the dilemmas
often faced by immigration officials and judges who must make life or death
decisions in limited time, with limited information at hand. Throughout his
absorbing narrative, Mr. Einolf explains the basic law of asylum in
layman's terms, examines the history of the asylum adjudication system, and
suggests proposals for reform.
********
********
16.
Migration, Transnationalization, and Race in a Changing New York
Edited by Hector R. Cordero-Guzman, Robert C. Smith and Ramon
Grosfoguel
Temple University Press, 352 pp.
Paperback, ISBN: 1-56639-888-6, $24.95
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1566398886/centerforimmgra/002-119916
4-3779033
Hardcover, ISBN: 1-56639-887-8, $74.50
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1566398878/centerforimmgra/002-119916
4-3779033
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Part I: Transnationalization, Globalization and Migration
Transnationalism, Then and Now: New York Immigrants Today and at the Turn
of the Century
By Nancy Foner
The Generation of Identity: Haitian Youth and the Transnational Nation-State
By Georges E. Fouron and Nina Glick Schiller
Political Incorporation and Re-Incorporation: Simultaneity in the Dominican
Migrant Experience
By Pamela M. Graham
Suburban Transmigrants: Long Island's Salvadorans
By Sarah Mahler
The Rules of the Game and the Game of the Rules: The Political Dimension of
Recent Chinese Immigration to New York
By Zai Liang
Gendered and Racialized Circulation-Migration: Implications for the Poverty
and Work Experience of New York's Puerto Rican Women
By Dennis Conway, Adrian J. Bailey, and Mark Ellis
Part II: Migration and Socio-Economic Incorporation in New York City
Class, Race, and Success: Indian-Americans Confront the American Dream
By Johanna Lessinger
Ethnic Niches and Racial Traps: Jamaicans in the New York Regional Economy
By Philip Kasinitz and Milton Vickerman
Neither Ignorance nor Bliss: Race, Racism and the West Indian Immigrant
Experience
By Vilna Bashi
Peruvian Historical Networks for Migration in New York City
By Alex Julca
Entrepreneurship and Business Development among African-Americans, Koreans,
and Jews: Exploring Some Structural Differences
By Jennifer Lee
When Co-ethnic Assets Become Liabilities: Mexicans, Ecuadorian and Chinese
Garment Workers in New York City
By Margaret M. Chin
********
********
17.
Mary Lou and John Tanton: A Journey into American Conservation
By John F. Rohe
Fair Horizon Press
Paperback, 277 pp., ISBN 097100790X, $15.99
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/097100790X/centerforimmgra/002-119916
4-3779033
PUBLISHER'S DESCRIPTION: John and Mary Lou Tanton's life-long love of the
outdoors placed them at the center of a heated controversy over
immigration, population, and the environment. They pioneered the movement
to examine the impact of our immigration policy on population growth, and,
in the process, they put a human face on the immigration reform movement.
Biographer John Rohe calls their journey "a case study in American
conservation in action."
********
********
18.
Integration and Resistance: The Relation of Social Organizations, Global
Capital, Governments and International Immigration in Spain and Portugal
By Ricard Moren-Alegret
Ashgate Publishing Co.
Hardcover, ISBN: 0754619443, $69.95,
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0754619443/centerforimmgra/002-119916
4-3779033
PUBLISHER'S DESCRIPTION: Integration is a key challenge facing modern
society today. Integration and Resistance offers a new theoretical
perspective for considering integration. By focusing on international
immigrants and their organisations from a wider perspective the author
demonstrates that the threat to social integration does not lie with the
immigrants themselves but with global capital and the state. By analysis of
data collected in Spain and Portugal the book breaks new ground in
providing information on processes occurring in intermediate-capitalist
countries that share some aspects of economic development, social and
migration features with Northern Europe and America whilst also sharing
other features such as the economic dependence of more impoverished
countries.
********
********
19.
Immigration and the Economy of Hong Kong
By Kit Chun Lam and Pak Wai Liu
City University of Hong Kong Press
177 pp., ISBN 962-937-019-0, $18
http://www.cityu.edu.hk/upress/hkcer/text/hk_immig.htm
PUBLISHER'S DESCRIPTION: Since 1995, immigration adds more people to the
population of Hong Kong than natural increase each year. Is there any
adverse economic impact of immigration on Hong Kong? The authors examine
the effect of immigration on wages and employment in the local labour
market. The book argues that by adopting a three-track immigration policy,
the growth of labour force will help maintain economic growth in Hong
Kong....
********
********
20.
Qu'est-ce qu'un Français?
Histoire De La Nationalite Francaise Depuis La Revolution
Patrick Weil
Bernard Grasset (Paris)
Paperback, 480 pp., ISBN 2246605717, 21.50 euros
http://www.grasset.fr/Grasset/CtlPrincipal?controlerCode=CtlCatalogue&reques
tCode=afficherArticle&codeArticle=9782246605713
first chapter:
http://www.grasset.fr/chapitres/ch_weil.htm
PUBLISHER'S DESCRIPTION (in English): What is a Frenchman? Or rather how
do you become one? Because your parents are French? Because you were born
in the country, even if your parents aren't French? Has the spirit of this
"nationality" changed throughout time? On what concepts is it founded?
Few people can answer these vital questions, preferring symbols or
phantasms to historical fact. Patrick Weil has been working on the subject
for ten years. This stunning work is the fruit of his labour: often
innovating, it is a perfect synthesis that spans from the Revolution to our
times.
To put it simply: under the Ancien regime -- royal and feudal -- you became
French because you were born there (jus solis). This system remained in
practice more or less until the Revolution, and the Code Civil of 1803.
Against Napoleon's will, a new principle was imposed: the exclusive
transmission of nationality by birth (jus sanguinis). "All those born of a
French father are French." This was the first step in the constitution of
modern law on nationality. Then followed the return of jus solis in 1889
(not replacing but adding to the previous) and the very open acquisition of
nationality in 1927. In reaction to that openness, there developed "crises
of French nationality" : the anti-Semitism of Vichy, and more recent
anti-Muslim feeling.
Never losing sight of the major tendencies, Patrick Weil leads us through
the successive regimes, ideas, crises in French and European history,
without avoiding the sensitive subjects: women, Algerian Muslims, the false
conflict between German and French law.
An essay rich in facts and concepts, previously unpublished references (on
Napoleon or Vichy among others) - indispensable for those who want to
understand French history and recent disputes on nationality.
********
********
21.
International Journal of Refugee Law
Volume 13, Issue 4, October 2001
http://www3.oup.co.uk/reflaw/hdb/Volume_13/Issue_04
Improving the United Nations Response to Crises of Internal Displacement
By Catherine Phuong
The Compatibility of Georgian National Legislation on Asylum Seekers and
Refugees with Norms and Principles of Public International Law: Some Aspects
By Vakhtang Shevardnadze
The jus cogens Nature of non-refoulement
By Jean Allain
Opinion. The Convention Refugee Definition and Gender-Based Persecution: A
Decade's Progress
By Ninette Kelley
Opinion. Futures of Refugees and Refugee Resettlement
********
********
22.
Bender's Immigration Bulletin
Below is the table of contents of a recent issue of Bender's Immigration
Bulletin, published twice a month as a companion to Bender's many
immigration-law publications. For more information, go to
http://www.bender.com and click on "Immigration Law" under "Channels".
Bender's Immigration Bulletin
Vol. 7, No. 6 (March 15, 2002)
Congress Grants Employment Rights to Certain Nonimmigrant Spouses
By Stanley Mailman and Stephen Yale-Loehr
Let the Judges Judge
By Stephen Yale-Loehr
Decision in Beharry v. Reno Presents Innovative Avenue of Relief for
Aggravated Felons
By Parastou Hassouri
United States v. Arvizu: What Is Reasonable?
By Maurice Goldman
Update: Federal Court Grants Motion to Amend CSS Case-Memorandum
By Peter Schey
NEWS:
* Argentina Ousted From VWP
* INS Data Management Task Force
CASES:
Federal and State Decisions
* Begzatowski v. INS (asylum)
* Zhang v. INS (aggravated felony)
* Kim v. Ziglar (due process; bail)
* U.S. ex rel. Radoncic v. Zemski (due process)
* Ramirez-Alejandre v. Ashcroft (due process; jurisdiction)
* U.S. v. Hernandez-Herrera (official restraint)
* U.S. v. Gonzalez-Torres (official restraint)
* U.S. v. Mendez-Casillas (illegal reentry)
* U.S. v. Ramirez-Martinez (aiding and abetting; sentencing)
* Brumme v. INS (habeas corpus)
* U.S. v. Szehinskyj (denaturalization)
* Matter of Application of Paula R. v. Goldstein (tuition rates)
DOCUMENTS (GOVERNMENTAL AND OTHERS):
Rules, Regulations, and Notices
INS Memoranda
* Employment of L and E Spouses and Overseas Employment Requirements
for Blanket L Petitions
State Department Cables
* 40 Quarters of Social Security Coverage in Lieu of Affidavit of
Support
* FMG Entry Requirements
* USA PATRIOT Act- Relief for Some
********
********
23.
The Social Contract, Winter 2002, Vol. XII, No. 2
The Terrorists Among Us: National Security vs Constitutional Liberties
http://www.thesocialcontract.com/cgi-bin/checkitout/checkitout.cgi?thesociaS
TORE:CKIE:prodtsc954-1202
Three Ways to Stop Foreign Terrorists
By James H. Walsh
The Illegals Among Us: Looking at 'Clear' Instructions From the Courts
By Robert D. Park
Becoming a Naturalized American: It's Free! It's Easy! It's Meaningless
By Gerda Bikales
Australia's November 2001 Election
By Denis McCormack
Immigration and the 'Culture War'
The Conservative View
By Carl Horowitz
********
********
24.
Ethnic and Racial Studies
Volume 25 Number 2, March 1, 2002
http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/app/home/issue.asp?wasp=7pab6qgbaf8wxp
fb1rwy&referrer=parent&backto=journal,1,25;searchpublicationsresults,2,2;
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Rational choice theory and the sociology of ethnic relations: a critique
By Sinisa Malesevi&cacute
Citizens and sons of the pueblo: national and local identities in the
making of the Mexican nation
By Jennie Purnell
Ethnic mobilization in an ethno-national state: the case of immigrants from
the Former Soviet Union in Israel
By Majid Al-Haj
Constructing difference and sameness: the politics of assimilation in
London's Arab communities
By Caroline Nagel
'Representing' British Muslims: the strategic dimension to identity
construction
By Vered Kahani-Hopkins and Nick Hopkins
Racist victimization among children in The Netherlands: the effect of
ethnic group and school
By Maykel Verkuyten and Jochem Thijs
********
********
25.
Journal of Intercultural Studies
Volume 23 Number 1, April 1, 2002
http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/app/home/journal.asp?wasp=ha0jxnxty3xf
hd6vkyvm&referrer=parent&backto=searchpublicationsresults,1,1;
Migrant Heritage in an Indigenous Context: for a decolonising migrant
historiography
By Joseph Pugliese
Polyphony, Polythetic Practice and Intercultural Communication in
Greek-Australian Creative Work
By Gillian Bottomley
Invitation or Invasion? The 'family home' metaphor in the Australian
media's construction of immigration
By Rachel Burke
********
********
26.
Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
Volume 11 Number 1, 2002
Migrations and Family Relations in the Asia Pacific Region
Edited by Brenda S.A. Yeoh, Elspeth Graham and Paul J. Boyle
http://www.skyinet.net/~smc/
Migrations and Family Relations in the Asia Pacific Region
By Brenda S.A. Yeoh, Elspeth Graham and Paul J. Boyle
Effects of International Migration on the Family in Indonesia
By Graeme Hugo
Filipino Navy Stewards and Filipina Health Care Professionals: Immigration,
Work and Family Relations
By Yen Le Espiritu
From the Life Stories of Filipino Women: Personal and Family Agendas in
Migration
By Maruja M.B. Asis
The Globalization fo Transnational Labor Migration and the Filipino Family:
A Narrative
By James A. Tyner
Sustaining Families Transnationally: Chinese-Malaysians in Singapore
By Theodora Lam, Brenda S.A. Yeoh and Lisa Law
Multi-local Residence, Transnational Networks: Chinese' Astronaut' Families
in New Zealand
By Elsie Seckyee Ho
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27.
Studi Emigrazione
December 2001, issue no. 144
http://www.cser.it/sunti_144.htm
Population trends and migratory pressure in the European Economic Area and
the Euro-Middle East Africa Region
By Antonio Gloini, Salvatore Strozza, Gerardo Gallo
Quando gli immigrati diventano imprenditori: la realta dell' artigianato in
Veneto e a Treviso
By Vittorio Filippi
Politica migratoria espanola en el marco europeo
Colectivo IOE
Politica migratoria in Germania e integrazione degli immigrati
By Ottao Filtzinger
Conflitti, migrazioni e diritti dell'uomo: il Mezzogiorno laboratorio di
un'identita mediterranea
By Rossella Caccavo
Globalizzazione e intercultura
By Angelo Negrini
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28.
Migrations Societe
Vol. 14, January-February 2002
http://www.ciemi.org/
Les migrations dans le monde: realites et perspectives
By Antonio Perotti
Les tendances migratoires en Afrique
By Meehra Sethi
Les tendances des migrations internationales vers et en Amerique du Nord a
la suite du 11 septembre: un premier apercu
By Mark J. Miller
Les mouvements mgratoires en Amerique latine: bilan et perspectives
By Mario Snatillo
La migration au Bresil au cours de la transition vers le nouveau siecle
By Sidnei Dornelas
Les tendances migatoires en Asie et en Australie
By Graziano Battistella
Les migrations et l' Europe mediterraneenne
By Gianmario Maffioletti
Les migrations dans les Balkans
By Sabina Eleonori
L'immigration en Italie
By Gianmario maffioletti
Les migration en Espagne
By Mariella Guidotti
Les migration au Portugal
By Mariella Guidotti
L'immigration en Grece
By Gianmario Maffioletti
La politique migratoire en Europe
By Pedro Vianna
Les migration et la mondialisation: synthese de la premiere journee
By Lorenzo Prencipe
L'avenir des migrations: vers une societe de la mobilite?
By Philippe Farine
A la recherche de la terre promise: mondialisation et mobilite
humaine. Quelle structure pour la future societe?
By Roberto Benecia
Mondialisation, marhes du travail et mobilite
By Manolo Abella
Mondialisation et migration qualifiee
By Enrico Todisco
Les deplacements forces de populations
By Xavier Creach
Pour une pedagogie des innocents: quelle ecole pour les enfants des
"travailleurs mobiles"?
By Jose de Souza Martins
Participation politique et reresentation des travailleurs etrangers
By Mark J. Miller
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29.
Estudios Migratorios Latinoamericanos
December 2000, Vol. 46
http://www.scalabrini.org/~cemla
Religiosidad e inmigracion: la scoiabilidad peruana en Madrid
By Asuncion Merino Hernando
La immigracion en Mexico en la segunda mitad del siglo XX. Un estudio
introductorio.
By Monica Plama Mora
Migracion, trabajo y globalizacion. La segmentacion laboral en la nueva
economia de las Estados Unidos.
By Alejandro I. Canales
El impacto de los immigrantes latinos en la economia de Memphis, Tennessee.
By Marcela Mendoza, David H. Ciscel, and Barbara E. Smith
-----------------------------------------------
Mark Krikorian, executive director
Center for Immigration Studies
1522 K Street N.W., Suite 820
Washington, DC 20005
(202) 466-8185 fax: (202) 466-8076
msk@cis.org http://www.cis.org
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