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Books,  Classics of Law & Society

Calavita adds 2nd edition of her classic U.S. Immigration Law and the Control of Labor

Reagan’s 1986 immigration reform law offered a composite of contradictory measures: sanctions curtailed employment of undocumented workers while other programs enhanced labor supply. Immigration law today continues the theme of contradictions and unmet goals. But hasn’t it always been so? Examining a century of U.S. immigration laws, from the nation’s early stages of industrialization to enactment of the quota system, Calavita explores the hypocrisy, subtext, and racism permeating an unrelenting influx of European labor.

Now in its second edition, this groundbreaking book offers a materialist theory of the state to explain the zigzaggingpolicies that alternately encouraged and ostensibly were meant to control the influx. The author adds a 2020 Preface to place the historical record into modern relief, even in the age of presidential characterization of immigrants as violent criminals and terrorists.

Writing in a new Foreword, Susan Bibler Coutin is “struck by the relevance of Calavita’s analysis to current debates over immigration policy,” as this social history “reveals alternatives to the present moment: over much of U.S. history, government officials actively recruited immigrants, even when segments of the public sought restrictions.” The aim was not “social justice or human rights, but rather to fuel economic expansion, depress wages, and counter unionization.” The book is recommended to a wide audience: “The theoretical discussion is accessible to new students as well as established scholars, and the rich documentary record sheds light on how current dynamics were set in motion.”

“Calavita lucidly and brilliantly clarifies the linkages among economic structure, ideology, and law making. She effectively depicts the history of U.S. immigration legislation as a series of attempted resolutions to recurring dilemmas rooted in the fiscal and legitimation crises facing the state.”
— Marjorie Zatz, Vice Provost, UC-Merced, in International Migration Review (1986)

Hardcover edition available at such sites as Amazon.comBarnes & Noble onlineBooksAMillion, YBP Library Services, Midwest Library Service, and Ingram catalog.
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Paperback at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, BooksAMillion, YBP, Midwest Library Service, Ingram, etc.

Also available at all leading eBook sites:

Amazon for Kindle.

Barnes & Noble for Nook.

Google for Play, as well as Google Books.

Apple iTunes and Bookstore, found direct on the iPad and iPhone.

And in ePUB format at Smashwords; look for it, too, at such eBook sites as Rakuten Kobobooks for the Kobo Reader, Axis360, Scribd, and most eLibrary sites.

Cataloging U.S. Immigration Law and the Control of Labor: 1820-1924 (Second Edition), by KITTY CALAVITA

ISBN 978-1-61027-412-8 (paperback)
ISBN 978-1-61027-417-3 (hardcover)
ASIN B08CBWT2YB (Kindle)
ISBN 978-1-61027-408-1 (eBook)

Page count: 248 pp.; list price US: $9.99 (eBook); $29.99 (pbk); $44.99 (hc)
Published July 9, 2020