Ronald Reagan and the Politics of Immigration Reform
By (Author) Nicholas Laham
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th May 2000
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Migration, immigration and emigration
Political leaders and leadership
325.73
Hardback
264
Laham argues that Ronald Reagan demonstrated gross ineptitude in his conduct of immigration policy. He failed to press for much-needed reforms in legal immigration while he supported the establishment of a fraud-ridden employer sanctions regime, which had no discernible effect in achieving its goal of stemming the flow of illegal immigration. He failed to take the first step toward the establishment of a fraud-resistant worker verification system, which would enable the employer sanctions provisions of the Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) to be effectively enforced. Additionally, he supported the amnesty provisions of IRCA, which granted permanent legal residence to 2.7 million often poorly educated, unskilled, and low-wage illegal aliens. According to Laham, Reagan's failure to develop a sound and effective immigration policy was not due to the president's urge to satisfy the desires of special interests. Rather, the Reagan administration was crippled in its ability to design a sound and effective immigration policy by the lack of accurate and reliable information on this issue and by the president's own ideological hostility toward big government. These factors impeded the ability of Congress to design an effective employer sanctions regime capable of stemming the flow of illegal immigration to the United States. This thorough and controversial analysis will be of particular interest to scholars, students, and researchers involved with American immigration studies, the presidency, and contemporary public policy.
.,."useful as a source book resource for students and researchers concerned with the making of immigration policy during the 1980s."-The Journal of Politics
...useful as a source book resource for students and researchers concerned with the making of immigration policy during the 1980s.-The Journal of Politics
Recommended for upper-division undergraduates and above.-Choice
This book is on balance, well-researched, and it offers fresh insight into the inner workings of the Reagan Administration on the important immigration policy area. It is a useful examination of the role of the Reagan Task Force appointed to shape IRCA with all the faults inevitable in a policy that, by its very design and legislative strategy, was a fatal attempt to implement diametrically opposed policy objectives.-International Migration Review
..."useful as a source book resource for students and researchers concerned with the making of immigration policy during the 1980s."-The Journal of Politics
"Recommended for upper-division undergraduates and above."-Choice
"This book is on balance, well-researched, and it offers fresh insight into the inner workings of the Reagan Administration on the important immigration policy area. It is a useful examination of the role of the Reagan Task Force appointed to shape IRCA with all the faults inevitable in a policy that, by its very design and legislative strategy, was a fatal attempt to implement diametrically opposed policy objectives."-International Migration Review
NICHOLAS LAHAM is an independent scholar specializing in the study of American politics and public policy. Dr. Laham has published three earlier books, the latest of which is The Reagan Presidency and the Politics of Race (Praeger, 1998).