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Book Review
Peter H. Schuck, Citizens, Strangers, and In-Betweens: Essays on Immigration
and Citizenship, Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1998. Pp. xviii
+ 475. $28.00. (ISBN 0-8133-6886-3
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For two decades, Peter Schuck, Simeon E. Baldwin
professor at Yale Law School, has been one of America's most perceptive
and provocative scholars of immigration law and policy. This book
collects much of his previously published work on various features
of America's immigration system. The result is excellentperhaps
the best single source for a cogent outline of current law and its
origins, as well as a sophisticated and engaging analysis of many
important contemporary policy issues. |
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The first of the book's five parts
briefly summarizes the U.S. immigration system. Part 2 deals with
the courts, focusing on the unique restrictions on judicial review
in the immigration context. Part 3 addresses the politics of immigration
reform, exploring major state and federal legal initiatives in the
1980s and 1990s. Part 4, entitled "Citizenship and the Community,"
reflects Schuck's concern with the "devaluation of American citizenship."
He also discusses the problems of dual citizenship, and America's
history of liberally granting citizenship to those born in the United
States, even to children of tourists and those here illegally. Schuck
deals with a number of political controversies in part 5, titled
"Current Policy Debates," including the relationship between new
immigrants and African-Americans, the international refugee problem,
and nativist objections to the brown and yellow immigration since
the landmark Immigration and Nationality Act Amendments of 1965
eliminated race as a formal criterion for entry. |
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The book demonstrates Schuck's intellectual
curiosity and breadth; the multidisciplinary nature of Schuck's
work is a particular strength. Some chapters are based on law review
articles, such as chapter 2, which reprints his influential Columbia
Law Review essay, "The Transformation of Immigration Law." However,
Schuck's work extends beyond traditional legal case analysis. Chapter
3 reports the results of his empirical analysis of the court system's
treatment of claims by aliens; chapter 4 is a work of political
science, describing how interest group politics led to liberalizing
reforms of federal immigration law in the 1980s. Chapter 14, "Alien
Ruminations," draws on Schuck's detailed and extensive knowledge
of the economic and social scientific research about immigration
to explode the factual assertions of nativist critics of liberal
American immigration policies. Many parts of the book draw on legal
history. |
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Like American immigration policy
itself, Schuck's work betrays both appreciation of immigration's
benefits and concern about its potentially problematic consequences.
Schuck proclaims that immigration "has served America well," but
in the same paragraph hints at a shadow of doubt, arguing that "policy
should assure that a larger share of the immigration flow consists
of individuals who are most likely to succeed in the American economy
of the twenty-first century" (358). The explanation may be less
that Schuck is inconsistent and more that he is honestly trying
to come up with the best policies he can identify. Thus, some of
his arguments will appear quite conservative when compared to the
human rights/due process immigration scholars who are prominent
in the field. Other observations are surprisingly internationalist
and liberal, such as chapter 10's defense of dual citizenship.
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Schuck's policy
recommendations tend to focus on procedure and structure, like how
aliens should be admitted or expelled, and what rights citizens
should have compared to resident aliens. When dealing with substantive
questions, like who and how many should be admitted as immigrants,
Schuck is sometimes content to identify and analyze a problem rather
than offering his solution. For example, a recurring theme in the
book is the importance of dealing with "illegal aliens." (Schuck's
rejection of the politically correct term is quite intentional;
under the index heading "undocumented aliens" the reader is instructed
to "See Immigration, illegal.") He excoriates the federal government
for failing to police the border and deport criminal aliens, but
these failures resulted from administrative ineptitude and lack
of resources, not because of any doubt that they were desirable
goals (342). Chapter 9 reaches the heart of the matter: drawing
on history and policy, Schuck argues that the Constitution does
not entitle the children of "illegal aliens" to citizenship just
because they were born in the United States. But he stops short,
admitting that he is "genuinely uncertain" about whether Congress
should exercise the power that he argues exists to restrict citizenship
by birth to children of citizens and lawful permanent resident aliens
(215). |
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Similarly, in chapter 11, "The
New Immigration and Old Civil Rights," one of the most intriguing
chapters in the book, Schuck observes that the growth of Latin and
Asian-American communities may harm African-Americans and disrupt
the liberal democratic coalition. "Ethnic demography is political
destiny," he writes, and "by that remorseless standard, blacks are
steadily losing power relative to other groups" (253). As voters,
competitors in the labor market, and competitors for political victories,
immigrants who are neither white nor black may complicate life for
African-Americans. Schuck notes that "the fact that some of these
immigration stories (or myths, if you prefer) are false is less
relevant politically than the fact that they tend to undermine the
group claims and status of blacks" (258). |
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Schuck's clear analysis and careful
marshaling of the relevant facts will help the readers reach their
own conclusions; for that reason, the chapter is certainly worthwhile
political science in and of itself. But it raises the question:
should the number of visas be reduced to protect African-Americans,
or would it be unjustifiable to limit immigration of people of color?
Schuck does not say, perhaps implicitly concluding that some issues
ultimately must be left to the values, principles, and political
judgments of voters and policymakers. |
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Where Schuck does make affirmative
policy recommendations, they often reinforce the impression that
he is an analyst more than an ideologue, a pragmatist more than
a utopian. Chapter 13, revealingly subtitled "A Modest Proposal,"
argues that the world refugee problem could be addressed in part
by a "play or pay" program under which wealthy countries such as
Germany or Japan could compensate countries that were reasonably
safe but less desirable as immigration destinations to take refugees
off their hands. In Schuck's view, this approach is realistic and
more likely than any other to deal with the crisis of displaced
persons, but it is also a concession that broader recognition of
international responsibility for refugees is unlikely. |
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Schuck's impact on immigration policy
includes teaching students who have become professors of immigration
law and offering testimony before Congress. This book shows that
his scholarly influence is also well deserved. Scholars and policymakers
will have to account for Schuck's views whether or not they ultimately
agree with them; persons learning about the field will find Schuck's
book an ideal means of understanding contemporary policy issues,
and the origins and structure of the law. |
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Gabriel J. Chin
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University of Cincinnati College of
Law
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