Debating immigration / edited by Carol M. Swain - New York : Cambridge University Press, 2007 - xii, 316 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.

Includes bibliographical references (p. 269-305) and index

Introduction / Carol M. Swain -- The disconnect between public attitudes and policy outcomes in immigration / Peter H. Schuck -- Carved from the inside out : immigration and America's public philosophy on citizenship / Elizabeth F. Cohen -- A Biblical perspective on immigration / James R. Edwards -- The moral dilemma of US immigration policy : open borders vs. social justice? / Stephen Macedo -- The undocumented immigrant : contending policy approaches / Linda Bosniak -- Good neighbors and good citizens : beyond the legal-illegal immigration debate / Noah Pickus and Peter Skerry -- Alien rights, citizen rights, and the politics of restricition / Rogers M. Smith -- The borderline madness : America's counterproductive immigration policy / Douglas S. Massey -- Immigrant employment gains and native losses 2000-2004 / Steven Camarota -- Economics of immigration and the course of the debate since 1994 / Peter Brimelow -- Immigration and future population change in America / Charles Westoff -- The congressional Black caucus and the impact of immigration on African-American unemployment / Carol Swain -- Hispanic and Asian immigrants : America's lost hope / Amitai Etzioni -- Strange bedfellows, unintended consequences and the curious an the curious contours of the immigration debate / Jonathan Tilove -- The free economy and the Jacobin State, or how Europe can cope with the coming immigration wave / Randall Hansen -- The politics of immigration and citizenship in Europe / Marc Morje Howard -- Concluding observations / Nathan Glazer

9780521875608 (hardback) RM266.40 9780521698665 (pbk.)


Immigrants--United States
Immigrants--European Union countries


United States--Emigration and immigration
European Union countries--Emigration and immigration
United States--Emigration and immigration--Government policy
European Union countries--Emigration and immigration--Government policy