Strangers or Friends: Principles for a New Alien Admission Policy
By (Author) Mark Gibney
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
23rd September 1986
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Migration, immigration and emigration
325.73
Hardback
184
The immigration problem, which has been debated in the United States for over a century, is not likely to go away--least of all with the numbers of refugees and displaced and impoverished workers continuing to mount worldwide. The current bitterness and legislative stalemate over immigration policy are indications that new approaches to the issue need to be found. Removing himself from the specifics of the current congressional debate, Mark Gibney asks whether we are addressing the right questions and employing the correct criteria under our present admission practices. From a political-philosophical standpoint, the author looks at the fundamental social and moral questions that should be at the basis of any immigration policy: how do we distinguish between members and strangers, and do some strangers have more compelling claims than others for admission to this country
This is an important and timely book. Congress is at this point reviewing the legal immigration policy in the United States which is presently based on family reunification as its overriding principle and, to a lesser extent, on economic need. Professor Gibney challenges these basic premises and suggests a rethinking of our alien admission policy that will "meet certain duties to those who live outside the United States, and, at the same time, maintain the autonomy of the U.S. community and its subcommunities." . . .-International Migration Review
"This is an important and timely book. Congress is at this point reviewing the legal immigration policy in the United States which is presently based on family reunification as its overriding principle and, to a lesser extent, on economic need. Professor Gibney challenges these basic premises and suggests a rethinking of our alien admission policy that will "meet certain duties to those who live outside the United States, and, at the same time, maintain the autonomy of the U.S. community and its subcommunities." . . ."-International Migration Review
MARK GIBNEY is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Purdue University. He is the author of Stranger or Friends: Principles for a New Alien Admission Policy (Greenwood Press, 1986). He has also written a number of law journal articles on U.S. immigration and refugee policy, and the judiciary's role in the conduct of foreign affairs.