Lee, Catherine.

Fictive Kinship : Family Reunification and the Meaning of Race and Nation in American Immigration. - 1st ed. - 1 online resource (200 pages)

Intro -- Half Title Page -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- Tables -- About the Author -- Acknowledgments -- Note on Terminology -- Chapter 1. Introduction: "Family Reunification Has Been the Cornerstone of Our Immigration Policy" -- Chapter 2. "The Fabric of Our Civilization as We Know It": Family in Research and Policy -- Chapter 3. "I Have Kept My Blood Pure": Gender Propriety, Class Privilege, and Racial Purity in Family Reunification During the Exclusion Era -- Chapter 4. "Reason of Elemental Humanity": The Urgency of Uniting Families in the Postwar Era on the Road to Immigration Reform -- Chapter 5. "Our Nation's Efforts to Protect Families Has Fallen Far Short": Pluralist Ideals and Vulnerable Families -- Chapter 6. Conclusion: "What Basis Do We Use to Decide Who Gets to Come?" -- Appendix: Data and Methods -- Notes -- References -- Index.

9781610448123


Family social work.
Family policy--United States.
Refugees--Family relationships--United States.
Racism--United States.
Family reunification.
United States--Emigration and immigration.


Electronic books.

HV699

325.73