Controlling Immigration: A Global PerspectiveWayne A. Cornelius Stanford University Press, 2004 - 534 sider In the 1990s, immigration emerged as a central issue of public policy and a driving factor in democratic elections throughout the world. Modern democracies now all face the same questions: how many immigrants to accept, what rights and special services to provide them, and how to control illegal immigration. This book provides a systematic, comparative study of immigration policy and policy outcomes in industrialized democracies. In-depth examinations of the United States, Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and Japan have been updated for the second edition, and new chapters on Canada, Australia, the Netherlands, and South Korea have been added. Each profile addresses why certain immigration control measures were selected and why these measures usually failed to achieve their stated objectives. The discussion has been expanded to address the growing trend of migration of highly skilled professional workers, a particularly salient issue in the United States. |
Innhold
The Limits | 3 |
The United States Canada | 15 |
France Germany | 25 |
Opphavsrett | |
19 andre deler vises ikke
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Controlling Immigration: A Global Perspective Wayne A. Cornelius,Takeyuki Tsuda,Philip L. Martin,James Frank Hollifield Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2004 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
American anti-immigrant arriving Asian asylum applications asylum seekers Australia Britain British CALIFORNIA Canada Canadian Canadian immigration citizenship country of immigration cultural demographic Dutch economic emigration employment enforcement enter entry ethnic ethnic Germans Europe European Union family reunification federal foreign workers foreign-born France French Germany global grants gration groups guestworkers illegal immigrants immi immigrant workers immigration law immigration policy impact of immigration increased industrial International Migration issue Italian Italy James Jupp Japan Japanese Korea labor market large numbers legal immigrants levels liberal major ment migrant workers million Ministry multiculturalism native-born Netherlands numbers of immigrants official Party Pasqua Law Pauline Hanson percent political population quota racial recent recruitment reduce refugees Reitz republican residence permits restrictive SAN DIEGO sector skilled social society South Korea Spain Spanish status temporary tion trainees U.S. Census Bureau U.S. immigration undocumented United Kingdom University Press visas wages