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Security and United States Immigration Policy

Abstract

What is the relationship between security and immigration to the United States? How do security objectives factor into U.S. immigration policy? These questions are significant for the U.S. because the volume of international migration has been increasing in recent years and without sound policy planning immigration will serve as a source of conflict with foreign states, tax the ability of domestic systems to assimilate diverse peoples without violence, and expose citizens and immigrants to crime, contagious disease, and terrorism. This dissertation answers the above questions and presents the strategic logic for U.S. immigration policy by providing a typology of security policy objectives for America in this area. It identifies three general categories of security objectives that American leaders have attempted to reach with immigration from the colonial era to the present-day: (1) domestic security (prevent crime, espionage, and terrorism; epidemics; and ethnic violence); (2) foreign relations; and (3) material and military interests. The analyses accompanying the categories draw from government documents, International Relations (IR) and security studies theories, legal statutes, primary sources such as private letters, and works by demographers and historians to specify the relationships amongst the security areas and immigration, identify the policy instruments used by leaders to influence immigration for security, and present a large body of cases of historical U.S. immigration policies designed for security purposes. The dissertation discovers that security has played a much larger and wider role in U.S. immigration policy than extant studies recognize and its findings have significance for the IR discipline, the American Political Development (APD) subfield, and the interdisciplinary Migration field, as well as for assisting leaders in devising prudent policies that maximize citizen and immigrant safety.

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