Fr. 140.00

Immigration Admissions - The Search for Workable Policies in Germany and the United States

English · Hardback

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Description

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There is general agreement today that traditional approaches to immigration admissions in the major receiving countries of the West have serious shortcomings either in concept or implementation, or at times in both. These essays, all written by leading immigration experts, consider the philosophical and moral constraints on immigration law and policy, the basic elements of a comprehensive migration policy, and specific policy areas, including family reunification and asylum. Taken together, these perspectives represent a fresh, comparative look at some of the most urgent issues in this pivotal area of law and policy.

List of contents


Introduction

Kay Hailbronner and Hiroshi Motomura

PART I: THE ETHICS OF IMMIGRATION

Chapter 1. The Philosophy and the policy Maker: Two Perspectives on the Ethics of Immigration with Special Attention to the Problems of Restricting Asylum

Joseph Carens

PART II: IMMIGRATION ADMISSIONS

Chapter 2. Comprehensive Migration Policy: the Main Elements and Options

Jörg Monar

Chapter 3. The Family and Immigration: a Road Map for the Ruritanian Lawmaker

Hiroshi Motomura

Chapter 4. Readmission Agreements

Olaf Reermann

Chapter 5. Migration Return policies and Countries of Origin

Rosemarie Rogers

Chapter 6. Is the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees Obsolete?

Joan Fitzpatrick

Chapter 7. Refugee Definition

Rainer Hofmann

Conclusion: Immigration Admissions and Immigration Controls

Kay Hailbronner, David A. Martin and Hiroshi Motomura

Notes on Contributors

Bibliography

Index

About the author


Hiroshi Motomura has been a professor of law at the University of Colorado School of Law in Boulder since 1982. Before that, he was an attorney in Washington, D.C., with a practice that included immigration law matters. He writes and lectures extensively on immigration law and policy topics, with an emphasis on constitutional issues. Publications include the law school casebook Immigration: Policy and Process (with T. Alexander Aleinikoff and David A. Martin; 3d ed. 1995) and the articles “The Curious Evolution of Immigration Law: Procedural Surrogates for Substantive Constitutional Rights” (Columbia Law Review 1992) and “Immigration Law after a Century of Plenary Power: Phantom Constitutional Norms and Statutory Interpretation” (The Yale Law Journal 1990).

Summary

These essays, all written by leading immigration experts, consider the philosophical and moral constraints on immigration law and policy, the basic elements of a comprehensive migration policy, and specific policy areas, including family reunification and asylum.

Product details

Assisted by Kay Hailbronner (Editor), David A. Martin (Editor), Hiroshi Motomura (Editor)
Publisher Ingram Publishers Services
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.12.1997
 
EAN 9781571811264
ISBN 978-1-57181-126-4
No. of pages 296
Weight 499 g
Series Migration and Refugees
Migration & Refugees S.
Migration & Refugees
Migration and Refugees
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > Sociological theories

Refugee and Migration Studies

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