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The document discusses the themes of international migration in the 21st century, emphasizing the political challenges and policy innovations it presents. It aims to bridge various academic fields to enhance understanding of immigration law, human rights, and immigrant outcomes at multiple levels. The book particularly focuses on the growth of immigration to the United States during the 1990s and early 2000s, addressing misconceptions and the status of undocumented immigrants.

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The document discusses the themes of international migration in the 21st century, emphasizing the political challenges and policy innovations it presents. It aims to bridge various academic fields to enhance understanding of immigration law, human rights, and immigrant outcomes at multiple levels. The book particularly focuses on the growth of immigration to the United States during the 1990s and early 2000s, addressing misconceptions and the status of undocumented immigrants.

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Migration in the 21st Century

International migration is a central theme of social science research in the early


21st century. It is a locus of tremendous political challenges as well as policy
innovation. Because immigration is a matter of importance to scholars and
policy-­makers in a variety of fields, it is important to bridge the gaps between
these fields so that innovations in legal, economic, sociological, and political
science research can inform each other. Migration in the 21st Century: Rights,
outcomes, and policy is designed to promote such cross-�disciplinary discussion.
In this volume, we examine the challenges and opportunities created by
global migration at the start of the 21st century. Our focus extends beyond eco-
nomic impact to questions of international law, human rights, and social and
political incorporation. We examine immigrant outcomes and policy questions at
the global, national, and local levels. Our primary purpose is to connect ethical,
legal, and social science scholarship from a variety of disciplines in order to
raise questions and generate new insights regarding patterns of migration and the
design of useful policy.
While the book incorporates studies of the evolution of immigration law glo-
bally and over the very long term, as well as considerations of the magnitude
and determinants of immigrant flows at the global level, it places particular
emphasis on the growth of immigration to the United States in the 1990s and
early 2000s and provides new insights on the complex relationships between
federal and state politics and regulation, popular misconceptions about the eco-
nomic and social impacts of immigration, and the status of “undocumented”
immigrants.

Thomas N. Maloney is an Associate Professor in the Department of Economics


and an Investigator in the Institute of Public and International Affairs at the
University of Utah. Kim Korinek is an Assistant Professor in the Department of
Sociology and an Assistant Investigator in the Institute of Public and Interna-
tional Affairs at the University of Utah.
Regions and cities
Series editors: Ron Martin
University of Cambridge, UK
Gernot Grabher
University of Bonn, Germany
Maryann Feldman
University of Georgia, USA
Gillian Bristow
University of Cardiff, UK.

Regions and Cities is an international, interdisciplinary series that provides


authoritative analyses of the new significance of regions and cities for economic,
social and cultural development, and public-­policy experimentation. The series
seeks to combine theoretical and empirical insights with constructive policy
debate and critically engages with formative processes and policies in regional
and urban studies.

╇ 1 Beyond Green Belts ╇ 6 The Regional Imperative


Managing urban growth in the Regional planning and governance
21st century in Britain, Europe and the United
Edited by John Herrington States
Urlan A. Wannop
╇ 2 Retreat from the Regions
Corporate change and the closure ╇ 7 The Determinants of Small Firm
of factories Growth
Stephen Fothergill and Nigel Guy An inter-�regional study in the
United Kingdom 1986–90
╇ 3 Regional Development in the Richard Barkham,
1990s Graham Gudgin, Mark Hart and
The British Isles in transition Eric Hanvey
Edited by Ron Martin and
Peter Townroe ╇ 8 The Regional Dimension of
Transformation in Central
╇ 4 Spatial Policy in a Divided Europe
Nation (April 1993) Gorzelak Grzegorz
Edited by Richard T. Harrison and
Mark Hart ╇ 9 Union Retreat and the Regions
The shrinking landscape of
╇ 5 An Enlarged Europe organised labour
Regions in competition? Ron Martin, Peter Sunley and
Edited by Louis Albrechts, Jane Wills
Sally Hardy, Mark Hart and
Anastasios Katos
10 Regional Development 18 Metropolitan Planning in
Strategies Britain
A European perspective A comparative study
Edited by Jeremy Alden and Edited by Peter Roberts,
Philip Boland Kevin Thomas and
Gwyndaf Williams
11 British Regionalism and
Devolution 19 Social Exclusion in European
The challenges of state reform and Cities
European integration Processes, experiences and
Edited by Jonathan Bradbury and responses
John Mawson Edited by Judith Allen,
Goran Cars and Ali Madanipour
12 Innovation Networks and
Learning Regions? 20 Regional Development Agencies
James Simmie in Europe
Edited by Charlotte Damborg,
13 Regional Policy in Europe Mike Danson and Henrik Halkier
S.S. Artobolevskiy
21 Community Economic
14 New Institutional Spaces Development
TECs and the remaking of Edited by Graham Haughton
economic governance
Edited by Martin Jones and 22 Foreign Direct Investment and
Jamie Peck the Global Economy
Corporate and institutional
15 The Coherence of EU Regional dynamics of global-­localisation
Policy Edited by Jeremy Alden and
Contrasting perspectives on the Nicholas F. Phelps
structural funds
Edited by John Bachtler and 23 Restructuring Industry and
Ivan Turok Territory
The experience of Europe’s
16 Multinationals and European regions
Integration Edited by Anna Giunta,
Trade, investment and regional Arnoud Lagendijk and Andy Pike
development
Edited by Nicholas A. Phelps 24 Out of the Ashes?
The social impact of industrial
17 Unemployment and Social contraction and regeneration on
Exclusion Britain’s mining communities
Landscapes of labour inequality Chas Critcher, Bella Dicks,
and social exclusion David Parry and
Edited by Sally Hardy, David Waddington
Paul Lawless and Ron Martin
25 Regional Innovation Strategies 33 Geographies of the New
The challenge for less-­favoured Economy
regions Critical reflections
Edited by Kevin Morgan and Edited by Peter W. Daniels,
Claire Nauwelaers Andrew Leyshon,
Michael J. Bradshaw and
26 Geographies of Labour Market Jonathan Beaverstock
Inequality
Edited by Ron Martin and 34 European Cohesion Policy
Philip S. Morrison Willem Molle

27 Sustainable Cities 35 Creative Regions


Graham Haughton and Technology, culture and
Colin Hunter knowledge entrepreneurship
Edited by Philip Cooke and
28 Regions, Spatial Strategies and Dafna Schwartz
Sustainable Development
David Counsell and 36 Devolution, Regionalism and
Graham Haughton Regional Development
The UK experience
29 Clusters and Regional Edited by Jonathan Bradbury
Development
Critical reflections and 37 Intelligent Cities and
explorations Globalisation of Innovation
Edited by Asheim Bjorn, Networks
Philip Cooke and Ron Martin Nicos Komninos

30 Regional Competitiveness 38 Whither regional studies?


Edited by Ron Martin, Edited by Andy Pike
Michael Kitson and Peter Tyler
39 Business Networks in Clusters
31 Regional Development in the and Industrial Districts
Knowledge Economy The governance of the global
Edited by Philip Cooke and value chain
Andrea Piccaluga Edited by Fiorenza Belussi and
Alessia Sammarra
32 The Rise of the English Regions?
Edited by Irene Hardill, 40 China and Europe
Paul Benneworth, Mark Baker The implications of the rise of
and Leslie Budd China for European space
Edited by Klaus R. Kunzmann,
Willy A. Schmid and
Martina Koll-�Schretzenmayr
41 Globalizing Regional 44 The Futures of the City Region
Development in East Asia Edited by Angela Hull and
Production networks, clusters, and Michael Neuman
entrepreneurship
Edited by Henry Wai-�chung Yeung 45 Migration in the 21st Century
Rights, outcomes, and policy
42 Manufacturing in the New Edited by Thomas N. Maloney and
Urban Economy Kim Korinek
Willem van Winden,
Leo van den Berg, Luis Carvalho,
and Erwin van Tuiji

43 The Impacts of Automotive


Plant Closures
A tale of two cities
Edited by Andrew Beer and
Holli Evans
Migration in the 21st
Century
Rights, outcomes, and policy

Edited by Thomas N. Maloney


and Kim Korinek
First published 2011
by Routledge
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada
by Routledge
270 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2010.
To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s
collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk.
© 2011 Selection and editorial matter, Thomas N. Maloney and
Kim Korinek; individual chapters, the contributors

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or


utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now
known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in
any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing
from the publishers.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Migration in the 21st century: rights, outcomes, and policy/edited by
Thomas N. Maloney and Kim Korinek
p. cm.
1. United States–Emigration and immigration–Social aspects–History–
21st century. 2. United States–Emigration and immigration–Political
aspects–History–21st century. 3. Emigration and immigration–21st
century. I. Maloney, Thomas N., 1964, – II. Korinek, Kim Marie.
JV6475.M54 2010
325.73–dc22 2010007264

ISBN 0-203-84512-9 Master e-book ISBN

ISBN 978-0-415-77914-2 (hbk)


ISBN 978-0-203-84512-7 (ebk)
Contents

List of illustrations xi
Notes on contributors xiv

╇ 1 Introduction 1
T h omas N . M aloney and K im K orinek

Part I
International law, human rights, and migration in the
global context 7

╇ 2 Living with noncitizens: migration, domination, and human


rights 9
J ames B o h man

╇ 3 The rights of aliens: legal regimes and historical perspectives 23


T ony A ng h ie and W ayne M c C ormack

╇ 4 How should corporate social responsibility address labor


migration in light of market globalization? 54
E rin O rti z , E st h er A gyeman - ­B udu , and
G eorge C h eney

Part II
Migrant impacts and outcomes: demographic, economic,
political, and social 77

╇ 5 Global patterns of migration, sources of data, and the new


policy consensus 79
R ic h ard E . B ilsborrow
x╇╇ Contents
6 The labor market effects of immigration: a unified view of
recent developments 98
G iovanni P eri

╇ 7 Bridging the gap: transnational and ethnic organizations in


the political incorporation of immigrants in the United States 126
A lejandro P ortes , C ristina E scobar , and
R enelinda A rana

╇ 8 Migrants, migrant communities, social capital, and violence 158


B enjamin N . J udkins and S tep h en E . R eynolds

╇ 9 Pathways to college, to the professoriate, and to a green card:


linking research, policy, and practice on immigrant Latino youth 177
C at h erine R . C ooper and R ebeca B urciaga

10 Facts and fictions of unauthorized immigration to the US 192


P atricia F ern á nde z - K elly

Part III
Rights, outcomes, and policy at the state and local level:
a case study of Utah 203

11 Driving in a new immigrant destination: migrant rights and


state-�level policy 205
J ulie S tewart and K en J ameson

12 Legal status and economic mobility among immigrants in the


early 21st century: evidence from the “new gateway” of Utah 226
T h omas N . M aloney and T h omas K ontuly

13 Trapped in resettlement! What integration for refugees in Utah? 247


M acleans A . G eo - ­J a J a

PART IV
Summary: what have we learned? 267

14 Immigration in the early 21st century: lessons from a


multidisciplinary perspective 269
K im K orinek and T h omas N . M aloney

Index 279
Illustrations

Figures
╇ 6.1 Immigration rates in 14 OECD countries, 1980–2005 107–111
╇ 6.2 Share of immigrants and the relative communication–manual
supply of skills by less-­educated natives (US states, year 2000) 115
╇ 6.3 Annual average percentage change in weekly wage of US-­born
males by skill group, 1960–2005, California and average US 118
╇ 6.4 Annual average percentage increase in employment due to
immigrants by skill group, 1960–2005, California and average
US 119
╇ 8.1 Immigrant group’s social capital and costs of entry for a
terrorist organization. Preferences for hierarchical control are
constrained by costs of entry 165
12.1 Median household income, Salt Lake County block groups 234
12.2 Share of the population in poverty, Salt Lake County block
groups 234
12.3 Share of the population unemployed, Salt Lake County block
groups 235
12.4 Share of the population with less than a high school diploma
or equivalent, Salt Lake County block groups 235
12.5 Percent of total undocumented by 1999 residence, Salt Lake
County block groups 236
12.6 Percent of legal immigrants by 1999 residence, Salt Lake
County block groups 236
12.7 Percent of total undocumented by 2007 residence, Salt Lake
County block groups 237
12.8 Percent of legal immigrants by 2007 residence, Salt Lake
County block groups 237
xii╇╇ Illustrations
Tables
╇ 4.1 How MNCs/TNCs are implicated in (labor) migration 62
╇ 4.2 Some markers and milestones in the development of corporate
social responsibility 64
╇ 4.3 The principles of the UN global compact (1999) 65
╇ 6.1 Calculated wage effects of immigrants, 1990–2006: long-­run
effects 103
╇ 6.2 Impact of yearly immigrant flows on production factors and
wages – 2SLS estimates, instruments: gravity push-­factors 113
╇ 6.3 Share of foreign-­born workers by schooling, US and California,
1960–2005 117
╇ 6.4 Partial elasticity between native- and immigrant-­labor supply,
two-­stage least squares (2SLS) estimation 121
╇ 7.1 Colombian, Dominican, and Mexican immigration –
characteristics of countries of origin and migrant communities 130–131
╇ 7.2 Inventoried immigrant organizations by type 134
╇ 7.3 Descriptive characteristics of sampled organizations 135
╇ 7.4 Examples of transnational and domestically-­oriented
organizations by nationality 136
╇ 7.5 Leaders’ evaluations of organizational effects on immigrant
political incorporation 140–141
╇ 7.6 Political characteristics of members of immigrant organizations 142
╇ 7.7 Political ties and civic/political activities of immigrant
organizations in the US 144
╇ 7.8 Count of civic/political activities in the United States by
nationality of organization and ethnic vs. transnational focus 144
╇ 7.9 Pro-�US integration attitudes of leaders of immigrant
organizations and their determinants 147
╇ 7.10 Pro-�US integration attitudes of leaders of immigrant
organizations interviewed face-­to-face 148
╇ 7.11 Number of US-­oriented political activities by immigrant
organizations and their determinants 149
╇ 7.12 Ties with US political authorities and their determinants 150
╇ 7.A Variables included in multivariate analyses 154
11.1 Number of licenses or IDs issued to unique ITIN (SS#â•›=â•›9)
holders 210
12.1 Residential segregation between undocumented immigrants,
legal immigrants, and natives in Salt Lake County, by block
group 238
12.2 Average household income in block group for undocumented
immigrants, legal immigrants, and natives in Salt Lake County 239
12.3 Average poverty rate in block group, for undocumented
immigrants, legal immigrants, and natives in Salt Lake County 240
Illustrations╇╇ xiii
12.4 Average unemployment rate in block group, for undocumented
immigrants, legal immigrants, and natives in Salt Lake County 240
12.5 Share of block-­group population with less than high school
diploma, for undocumented immigrants, legal immigrants, and
natives in Salt Lake County 241
12.6 Change in average block-­group characteristics due to most
recent move, for undocumented immigrants, legal immigrants,
and natives in Salt Lake County 243
Contributors

Esther Agyeman-�Budu is a Doctoral Candidate in the School of Communica-


tion Studies, Kent State University.
Tony Anghie is a Professor in the SJ Quinney College of Law, University of
Utah.
Renelinda Arana is an Assistant Professor in the Sociology Program, Depart-
ment of Applied Social and Cultural Studies, Our Lady of the Lake University.
Richard E. Bilsborrow is a Professor of Biostatistics and Fellow, Carolina
Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
James Bohman is a Professor in the Department of Philosophy and Danforth
Professor in the Humanities, Saint Louis University.
Rebeca Burciaga is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Educational
Leadership, San José State University.
George Cheney is the John T. Jones Centennial Professor of Communication at
the University of Texas at Austin, and Adjunct Professor, Department of
Management Communication, University of Waikato (New Zealand). He is
formerly Professor, Department of Communication, and Director, Barbara L.
and Norman C. Tanner Center for Nonviolent Human Rights Advocacy,
�University of Utah.
Catherine R. Cooper is a Professor in the Department of Psychology, Univer-
sity of California, Santa Cruz.
Cristina Escobar is a Research Associate in the Center for Migration and
Development, Princeton University.
Patricia Fernández-Kelly is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Sociology
and Research Associate, Office of Population Research, Princeton University.
Macleans A. Geo-�JaJa is a Professor of Economics and Education in the
McKay School of Education, Brigham Young University, and Visiting
Research Professor, Institute of African Studies, Zhejiang Normal University,
China.
Contributors╇╇ xv
Ken Jameson is a Professor in the Department of Economics, and Investigator,
Institute of Public and International Affairs, University of Utah.
Benjamin N. Judkins is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political
Science, University of Utah.
Thomas Kontuly is a Professor in the Department of Geography, and Investiga-
tor, Institute of Public and International Affairs, University of Utah.
Kim Korinek is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology, Assist-
ant Investigator, Institute of Public and International Affairs, and Associate
Director, Barbara L. and Norman C. Tanner Center for Nonviolent Human
Rights Advocacy, University of Utah.
Wayne McCormack is E. Wayne Thode Professor, SJ Quinney College of Law,
University of Utah.
Thomas N. Maloney is an Associate Professor in the Department of Economics
and Investigator in the Institute of Public and International Affairs, University
of Utah.
Erin Ortiz is a Doctoral Candidate in the Department of Communication,
�University of Utah.
Giovanni Peri is an Associate Professor in the Department of Economics,
University of California, Davis, Research Associate, National Bureau of
­Economic Research, and Research Fellow, CESifo.
Alejandro Portes is a Professor in the Department of Sociology, Princeton
�University.
Stephen E. Reynolds is a Professor in the Department of Economics, University
of Utah.
Julie Stewart is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology, and
Assistant Investigator, Institute of Public and International Affairs, University
of Utah.
1 Introduction
Thomas N. Maloney and Kim Korinek

International migration is a central concern of social science research in the early


21st century. It is a locus of tremendous political challenges, as well as policy
innovation. Because immigration is a matter of importance to scholars and
policy-­makers in a variety of fields, it is important to bridge the gaps between
these fields so that innovations in legal, economic, sociological, geographic, and
political science research can inform each other. This volume is designed to
promote such cross-�disciplinary discussion. It examines the challenges and
opportunities created by migration at the start of the 21st century. Our focus
extends beyond economic impact to questions of international law, human rights,
and social and political incorporation. We examine immigrant outcomes and
policy questions at the global, national, and local levels. Our primary purpose is
to connect ethical, legal, and social science scholarship from a variety of disci-
plines in order to raise questions and generate new insights regarding patterns of
migration and the design of useful policy.
Part I considers migration at the global level, focusing on questions of human
rights, the evolution of international law, and the responsibilities of private cor-
porations that employ migrant labor. These questions are in the background of
much research on migration, but we make them the explicit context within which
we will examine patterns of migration, migrant outcomes, and the impact of
migrants on receiving countries and communities.
In Chapter 1, James Bohman considers the problematic status of migrants at a
very fundamental level: How should communities treat people who reside among
them but who are not citizens or who are present “illegally”? Bohman argues in
favor of Arendt’s conception of a fundamental human “right to have rights.”
Recognizing such a status will require new institutions, new domestic courts of
appeal for such persons as well as transnational institutions in which the rights
of migrants are made more concrete.
Tony Anghie and Wayne McCormack then trace the legal history of migrant
rights, distinguishing between the “right to enter a place” and “rights of indi-
viduals once they have entered” (the latter of which is Bohman’s main concern).
Their very long-�term analysis allows them to track the switch in the nature of
migrants and of receiving countries over the past few centuries: from migrants as
citizens of colonial powers entering new lands to migrants as displaced persons,
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