Epidemics,national security,and US immigration policy |
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Authors: | Robbie J. Totten |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Political Science, College of Arts &2. Sciences, American Jewish University, 15600 Mulholland Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90077, USA |
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Abstract: | What are relationships between epidemics, national security, and US immigration policy? This question is important because it sheds light on transnational or nontraditional security areas, American immigration policy, and a pressing issue for US leaders who have recently faced epidemics such as the West Africa Ebola outbreak that began in 2013. This article answers it and lays ground in the area by reviewing epidemics in world history, using International Relations and Security Studies works to specify dangers of contagions for states, and identifying three general immigration measures that American leaders have utilized from the seventeenth century to the present day to protect against contagions, which are (1) policies restricting entrance of foreigners thought to carry specified diseases, (2) the isolation or quarantining of immigrants with contagious disease, and (3) delegating the President with authority to stop immigration in the event of an epidemic abroad. This study has implications for research and contemporary US immigration policy. |
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Keywords: | US immigration policy national security epidemics pandemics international migration Ebola transnational security nontraditional security area state migration policy American immigration second-image reversed security studies globalization |
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