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Immigration in the Court of Public Opinion. Edition No. 1. Immigration and Society

  • Book

  • 192 Pages
  • November 2022
  • John Wiley and Sons Ltd
  • ID: 5841141

What does a nation of immigrants think and feel about immigration? Recent accounts of immigration policy routinely cast Americans as divided into two warring camps - one fueled by threat to livelihoods and way of life, the other by a fervent cosmopolitanism that sees the nation-state as passé.

This counter-intuitive book shows that these accounts miss the mark. First, almost all Americans hold a mix of ""pro-"" and ""anti-immigrant"" opinions. Their views are pragmatic and flexible rather than dead-set. Second, opinions about immigration are more powerfully influenced by liberal values and concerns about the well-being of American society as a whole than by identity politics. Third, the assimilation Americans demand from immigrants matches patterns of integration that Hispanic and Asian immigrants overwhelmingly follow. Finally, American attitudes toward immigrants are ""exceptional"" for their openness and respect for cultural pluralism.

In Citrin, Levy, and Wright's view, long-elusive comprehensive immigration reform can win in the court of public opinion - but only if leaders heed their constituents rather than the polarized activists who claim to speak on their behalf. This expert analysis rethinks the role of public opinion in immigration matters: its insights will be welcomed by all interested in immigration debates and public policy.

Table of Contents

Preface

Chapter 1: Who Are We Now?

Chapter 2: Moderation, Malleability, and the Myth of Warring Camps

Chapter 3: Motivations

Chapter 4: Assimilation Then and Now

Chapter 5: American Exceptionalism?

Chapter 6: Conclusion

Notes

Authors

Jack Citrin Morris S. Levy Matthew Wright