The New Case Against Immigration
Book Forum
About This Event

Online registration for this event is closed. Walk-in registrations will be accepted.

Ever since its founding, the United States has expected its immigrants--from Italians to Indians--to learn English, to earn a living, and to become patriotic Americans. Yet, with the rise of identity politics and Great Society entitlements, people have Listen to Audio


Download Audio as MP3
increasingly been able to eschew these obligations. At the same time, advances in communications and transport technologies have removed the need for immigrants to leave behind their pre-existing cultural commitments and communal allegiances in favor of the “American Creed.”

In his new book, The New Case Against Immigration, Mark Krikorian of the Center for Immigration Studies argues that although immigrants to America may be no different than before, changes to America’s economy, society, and government mean that the nation is no longer able to assimilate a substantial immigrant population. On July 1, AEI will host a presentation of the arguments in the new book, followed by a critical discussion of its themes by Fred Siegel of the Cooper Union and National Research Initiative fellow Jason Richwine. AEI resident fellow David Frum will moderate.

Agenda
1:45 p.m.
Registration
2:00
Presenter:
Mark Krikorian, Center for Immigration Studies
Discussants:
Jason Richwine, AEI
Fred Siegel, Cooper Union
Moderator:
3:30
Adjournment
Event Summary

Immigration and Social Mobility Debated at AEI

WASHINGTON, JULY 1, 2008--The similarity of Barack Obama and John McCain's positions on immigration legislation may have shifted the issue from the center of the political debate, but it is unlikely to rest there for long. In a newly published book, The New Case Against Immigration, Mark Krikorian sets out the reasons why many Americans think that immigration adversely affects the nation's interests.

Presenting his case at an AEI forum on July 1, hosted by the Institute's National Research Initiative, Krikorian argued that the loud public debate which contrasts legal with illegal immigration misses the point. What is significant, he suggested, is that high levels of immigration are flooding the low-skilled labor market and that the United States is importing a nineteenth-century workforce of millions into a twenty-first-century high-tech economy.

Krikorian also suggested that America's ability to assimilate immigrants has radically deteriorated over the past half-century, and that modern social institutions have essentially neglected this task in favor of other objectives. Multicultural dogmas have prevented schools from insisting that immigrants adopt core American values, and modern technology has allowed modern immigrants to live transnational lives, so that they retain greater allegiances to their native communities than to the United States. Krikorian argued that high levels of unassimilated immigrants have also created an environment in which terrorist threats to the United States can percolate.

In response, Fred Siegel of the Cooper Union said that society has indeed changed since earlier major waves of immigration. But he reminded the audience that the modern welfare state was created in part as a response to the ill-effects of increased dislocation in a globalized world and hence was not its cause. Siegel also argued that America's education system is to blame for the breakdown of assimilation and for reduced social mobility for native-born low-wage workers and that this has only increased the need for America to import skilled immigrants.

The second panelist, AEI's Jason Richwine, said that while anti-immigration sentiment often seems to be driven by a grab bag of various anxieties, the underlying problem is that the current wave of immigration is different from existing American ethnic groups--and this has generated less readily eradicable tribal feelings.

--CHRIS POPE

For video, audio, and more information about this report, visit www.aei.org/event1739/.

For more information about AEI's National Research Initiative, visit www.aei.org/nri/.

For media inquiries, contact Véronique Rodman at 202.862.4870 or vrodman@aei.org.

###

View complete summary.
AEI Participants

 

David
Frum
  • David Frum is the author of six books, most recently, Comeback: Conservatism That Can Win Again (Doubleday, 2007). While at AEI, he studied recent political, generational, and demographic trends. In 2007, the British newspaper Daily Telegraph named him one of America's fifty most influential conservatives. Mr. Frum is a regular commentator on public radio's Marketplace and a columnist for The Week and Canada's National Post.
AEI on Facebook