Alienated: Immigrant Rights, the Constitution, and Equality in America (Critical America Series) Buy on Amazon
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Alienated: Immigrant Rights, the Constitution, and Equality in America (Critical America Series)

Publisher NYU Press
42.75 45.00 -5% USD

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Book Details
Author(s) Victor C. Romero
Publisher NYU Press
ISBN / ASIN 0814775683
ISBN-13 9780814775684
Availability Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank #2,663,998
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
Description

Throughout American history, the government has used U.S. citizenship and immigration law to protect privileged groups from less privileged ones, using citizenship as a “:legitimate” proxy for otherwise invidious, and often unconstitutional, discrimination on the basis of race. While racial discrimination is rarely legally acceptable today, profiling on the basis of citizenship is still largely unchecked, and has in fact arguably increased in the wake of the September 11 terror attacks on the United States. In this thoughtful examination of the intersection between American immigration and constitutional law, Victor C. Romero draws our attention to a “constitutional immigration law paradox” that reserves certain rights for U.S. citizens only, while simultaneously purporting to treat all people fairly under constitutional law regardless of citizenship.

As a naturalized Filipino American, Romero brings an outsider's perspective to Alienated, forcing us to look at constitutional immigration law from the vantage point of people whose citizenship status is murky (either legally or from the viewpoint of other citizens and lawmakers), including foreign-born adoptees, undocumented immigrants, tourists, foreign students, and same-gender bi-national partners. Romero endorses an equality-based reading of the Constitution and advocates a new theoretical and practical approach that protects the individual rights of non-citizens without sacrificing their personhood.

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