How is legal membership framed by American political elites? I address this question through a comparative analysis on debates surrounding the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act and the Agricultural Job Opportunities, Benefits and Security (AgJOBS) Act. I define framing legal membership as the conception and articulation of national membership through the law. Literature has stressed three types of ideologies framing citizenship in the United States: republican membership, liberal membership and ‘ascriptive Americanism’. However, there are other ideologies that come into play when it comes to framing who deserves to be a legal member of the United States. I examine the importance cultural, economic, and national...
At the heart of contemporary immigration debates lies a fundamental tension between the competing vi...
Since the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, the United States has conferred citizenship to a...
My analysis places the assertions of political presence by non-citizen immigrant youth in the U.S. (...
How is legal membership framed by American political elites? I address this question through a compa...
The grassroots movement propelling the DREAM Act and immigration reform forward reveals how the defi...
Some of the most controversial topics in immigration and citizenship law involve granting lawful imm...
Citizenship scholarship is pervasively organized around a binary concept: there is citizenship (whi...
Repeal of birthright citizenship for the US-born children of unauthorized immigrants would expand th...
The late 2000s marked an important shift in the immigrant rights movement. It was the period in whic...
This article investigates the advocacy of undocumented immigrant youth to realize the passage of the...
The U.S. is experiencing a crisis of citizenship. Political participation and social capital are dec...
For more than a decade, a single rubric for legalization of the 11 million undocumented people in th...
This thesis describes DREAM Act, a legislative proposal discussed in the US Congress between 2001 an...
This thesis writes the history of the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM ACT...
This research study aims to support the enactment of the Development, Relief and Education for Alien...
At the heart of contemporary immigration debates lies a fundamental tension between the competing vi...
Since the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, the United States has conferred citizenship to a...
My analysis places the assertions of political presence by non-citizen immigrant youth in the U.S. (...
How is legal membership framed by American political elites? I address this question through a compa...
The grassroots movement propelling the DREAM Act and immigration reform forward reveals how the defi...
Some of the most controversial topics in immigration and citizenship law involve granting lawful imm...
Citizenship scholarship is pervasively organized around a binary concept: there is citizenship (whi...
Repeal of birthright citizenship for the US-born children of unauthorized immigrants would expand th...
The late 2000s marked an important shift in the immigrant rights movement. It was the period in whic...
This article investigates the advocacy of undocumented immigrant youth to realize the passage of the...
The U.S. is experiencing a crisis of citizenship. Political participation and social capital are dec...
For more than a decade, a single rubric for legalization of the 11 million undocumented people in th...
This thesis describes DREAM Act, a legislative proposal discussed in the US Congress between 2001 an...
This thesis writes the history of the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM ACT...
This research study aims to support the enactment of the Development, Relief and Education for Alien...
At the heart of contemporary immigration debates lies a fundamental tension between the competing vi...
Since the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, the United States has conferred citizenship to a...
My analysis places the assertions of political presence by non-citizen immigrant youth in the U.S. (...