Citizenship, Race, and Immigration

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Overview

Subject area

ANT

Catalog Number

3126

Course Title

Citizenship, Race, and Immigration

Description

This course examines the intersection of citizenship (defined “as the right to have rights”) with race (defined as processes of racial formation) and the impact of race on the politics and policies of U.S. immigration. The course focuses on the ways in which access to citizenship has historically been a contentious and antagonistic process in which race and racialization have fundamentally shaped immigration politics and policies, excluding and accepting new potential citizens in ways dependent on race. Examining historical records allows us to understand the mediation of race in the provision of access to differentiated forms of entitlement, rights, and obligations. As importantly, these racialized patterns of relationships between ethnic and racial communities, on the one hand, and the state/economy, on the other hand, have been historically fundamental to processes of incorporating immigrant labor into the American workforce. Students will receive credit for either ANT 3126 or SOC 3126, not both. These courses may substitute for each other with the F-replacement option.

Typically Offered

Fall, Spring, Summer

Academic Career

Undergraduate

Liberal Arts

Yes

Credits

Minimum Units

3

Maximum Units

3

Academic Progress Units

3

Repeat For Credit

No

Components

Name

Lecture

Hours

3

Requisites

035528

Course Schedule