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ID110957
Title ProperReconsidering US immigration reform
Other Title Informationthe temporal principle of citizenship
LanguageENG
AuthorCohen, Elizabeth F
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The uncertain political status of America's millions of undocumented immigrants and their children has exposed deep and ongoing disagreement about how US citizenship should be accorded to foreign-born persons. I identify the principle of jus temporis, a law of measured calendrical time, that has worked in concert with jus soli and consent to construct citizenship law since the nation's founding. Jus temporis translates measured durations of time such as "time in residence" or "time worked" into entitlement to rights and status. It creates temporal algorithms in which measured calendrical time plus additional variables (e.g., physical presence, education, or behavior) equals consent to citizenship. I explore recent scholarly references to temporal principles and trace the history of how jus temporis was invoked by the nation's first Supreme Court jurisprudence on citizenship and the first Congressional debates about immigration and naturalization. Scholarly convergence on the principle of jus temporis as well as its originalist pedigree imbue this principle with the potential to resolve contemporary disagreements about the rights and status of foreign-born persons in the US.
`In' analytical NotePerspectives on Politics Vol. 9, No.3; Sep 2011: p.575-583
Journal SourcePerspectives on Politics Vol. 9, No.3; Sep 2011: p.575-583
Key WordsUS Immigration Reform ;  Principle of Citizenship ;  United States