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Elusive Citizenship Immigration Asian Americans And The Paradox Of Civil Rights John S W Park

  • SKU: BELL-51760520
Elusive Citizenship Immigration Asian Americans And The Paradox Of Civil Rights John S W Park
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Elusive Citizenship Immigration Asian Americans And The Paradox Of Civil Rights John S W Park instant download after payment.

Publisher: New York University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.13 MB
Author: John S. W. Park
ISBN: 9780814768693, 0814768695
Language: English
Year: 2004

Product desciption

Elusive Citizenship Immigration Asian Americans And The Paradox Of Civil Rights John S W Park by John S. W. Park 9780814768693, 0814768695 instant download after payment.

Asian American immigration/citizenship law.


Since the late nineteenth century, federal and state rules governing immigration and naturalization have placed persons of Asian ancestry outside the boundaries of formal membership. A review of leading cases in American constitutional law regarding Asians would suggest that initially, Asian immigrants tended to evade exclusionary laws through deliberate misrepresentations of their identities or through extralegal means. Eventually, many of these immigrants and their descendants came to accept prevailing legal norms governing their citizenship in the United States. In many cases, this involved embracing notions of white supremacy.
John S. W. Park argues that American rules governing citizenship and belonging remain fundamentally unjust, even though they suggest the triumph of a "civil rights" vision, where all citizens share the same basic rights. By continuing to privilege members over non-members in ways that are politically popular, these rules mask injustices that violate principles of fairness. Importantly, Elusive Citizenship also suggests that politically and socially, full membership in American society remains closely linked with participation in exclusionary practices that isolate racial minorities in America.

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