Douglas Massey - Princeton University

The Paradoxical Origins and Radical Consequences of America's War on Immigrants

    Date:  09/13/2012 (Thu)

    Time:  3:30pm- 5:00pm

    Location:  Seminar will be held on-site: Social Sciences 111

    Organizer:  Giovanna Merli


Meeting Schedule: (Not currently open for scheduling. Please contact the seminar organizer listed above.)

    All meetings will be held in the same location as the seminar unless otherwise noted.

   *** - ALL MEETINGS (unless otherwise noted) ARE IN 232 SOC-SCI ***

   12:00pm - Lunch with Duke Faculty (12:00 to 1:00pm), Faculty Commons: J. Vigdor, Joe Hotz

    1:00pm - Peter Arcidiacono

    1:30pm - Jen'nan Read & Katherine King

    2:00pm - Linda Burton and Juhi Verma

    2:30pm - DuPRI students-Deborah Rho, Qiang Fu, Paige Borelli, Sancha Medwinter, Hang Young

    3:10pm - Giovanna Merli

    3:30pm - Seminar Presentation (3:30pm to 5:00pm)

    5:00pm - Reception (5:00pm to 7:00pm), Gothic Reading Room- Perkins Library

   7:30pm - Dinner, Vin Rouge


    Additional Comments:  ABSTRACT: In a very real way, the rise of undocumented migration and the growth of America’s undocumented population are a product of poorly conceived immigration and border policies, which in the course of a few decades transformed Mexico-U.S. migration from a stable, circular flow of male Mexican workers going to three states into a much larger settled population of Mexican families living in 50 states. During the late 1950s the United States was providing opportunities for half a million Mexican migrants to enter the United States legally each year, 450,000 as temporary workers and 50,000 as permanent residents. In 1965, however, the temporary worker program was eliminated and permanent resident visas were capped, ultimately at just 20,000 per year by 1976. The resultant rise of illegal migration offered political and bureaucratic entrepreneurs an opportunity to frame Mexican migration as a threat to American society and the immigrants themselves as lawbreakers, criminals, and most recently terrorists. The demonization of Mexican immigrants set off a chain reaction of events that ultimately yielded a massive increase in both border and internal enforcement, which transformed the circularity, demography, and geography of Mexico-U.S. migration.