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Blaming Immigrants
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A look at American immigration policy through a global perspective, showing how immigration policies and patterns are influenced by international factors, such as access to technology, population trends, and economic needs.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: It’s Not a Crisis
2. Causes of Discontent
3. The Costs and Benefits of Restricting Immigration
4. Is America’s Immigration System Broken?
5. From Global to Local: Toward Integration or Exclusion?
6. The Balance Sheet: Economic Costs and Benefits of Immigration
7. Refugees and Discontent
8. Crime, Terrorism, and Immigration
9. Addressing the Discontent
Notes
Index

About the Author

Neeraj Kaushal is professor of social policy at the Columbia University School of Social Work. She is also a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and a research fellow at the Institute for the Study of Labor in Bonn, Germany.

Reviews

[A] timely and informative book.
*Foreign Affairs*

A new book on the subject, Blaming Immigrants, by University of Columbia professor, Neeraj Kaushal, says it all. It pulls together most of the research so far done.
*NY Journal of Books*

This is a well written book that draws on the wealth of literature from diverse disciplines, particularly economics, demography, and political science, to make a case that immigration has many positive consequences for the host society.
*Population and Development Review*

Highly recommended.
*Choice*

The great merit of Kaushal’s book is that it makes the case for policies based on facts and evidence, and shows the need for political leaders to explain different ‘costs’ and ‘benefits’ in ways which are considered rather than indulging unjustified antipathies and anxieties about ‘others’.
*Process North*

The book is well written, accessible, and should be essential reading for undergraduate courses on global capitalism, politics of migration, and the status of refugees in contemporary times.
*H-Emotions*

This is an exciting and innovative book containing some provocative, offbeat ideas. In contrast to most other works on immigration, it deals with international migration and the reactions to it all over the world, not just in the United States or Europe. It emphasizes the complexity of the issues and avoids oversimplifying the problems in order to offer a ‘solution.’ Kaushal has an important, well-argued message, supported by convincing evidence. She recognizes that immigration hurts some groups of host-country natives who should be compensated, but provides evidence that it benefits the host societies overall.
*Cordelia Reimers, Hunter College*

In this comprehensive and carefully researched book, Kaushal provides a fresh and convincing analysis of the underlying reasons behind the antiimmigrant movement facing the world in recent years. This book is a must for anyone interested in understanding both the myths and realities surrounding immigration.
*Francisco L. Rivera-Batiz, author of International and Interregional Migration: Theory and Evidence*

What could be more valuable at this time than Neeraj Kaushal’s learned, beautifully written examination of the validity of the populist critique of immigration? Blaming Immigrants provides deep, critical insights into migration and immigration systems globally and in the U.S.: their histories, successes, failures, and prospects for reform. This is a nuanced, brave, and incredibly helpful book.
*Michael Fix, senior fellow and former president, Migration Policy Institute*

In her well-reasoned, illuminating book, Neeraj Kaushal offers policy makers at all levels of government and the general public alike a timely opportunity to examine the dimensions of immigration concerns that have become highly charged, politically divisive issues in a growing number of nations in the global community. Her richly documented discussion pierces through the oftentimes emotion-laden, dismissive regard of immigrants and their impact on host communities and argues that we must view critically the underlying social, economic, and other forces that contribute towards a skewing in the direction of hostility to those “others” who ultimately may be essential to ensuring our vitality and competitiveness in the future.
*Jeanette C. Takamura, former assistant secretary for aging, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services*

Neeraj Kaushal’s “Blaming Immigrants” is a clear-eyed, clutter-free and passionate presentation of the contested domains of migration, and immigration amid rising nationalisms. Kaushal marshals economic, political and legal data to make a positive case for immigration. It is a convincing and needed argument and one that ought to resonate across political divides for its capacious and fair-minded approach.
*Manan Ahmed Asif, author of The Loss of Hindustan: The Invention of India*

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