The War on Terror as a Metaphor for Immigration Regulation: A Critical View of a Distorted Debate

Geoffrey A. Hoffman, Susham M. Modi
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

The “war on terror” represents a powerful metaphor reaching into the everyday lives of millions of non-U.S. citizens and citizens alike, both domestically and abroad. The “war” has skewed the debate, specifically regarding immigration regulation and reform. It is especially pernicious because it operates, on an unconscious level, on our unstated assumptions about immigrants and immigrant populations. In this Article, the authors begin with a discussion of the so-called “anchor” babies, now transmogrified into a new, scarier concept, “terror” babies. This is a good starting point for the discussion because it illustrates quite poignantly the ways in which the rhetoric has driven the debate to the point of absurdity and hyperbole. We then address the proliferation of terror-related grounds of inadmissibility and deportability. The issues which have come up in proceedings center around the malleability of the term “material support,” the exceedingly large breadth of scope in the term “terrorist activity,” as well as the difficulties which follow from allowing for the incorporation of the inadmissibility grounds into the parallel ground of deportability in section 237 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”). Equally disturbing are the misunderstandings surrounding the term “illegal immigrant.” We argue for a more nuanced approach which takes into account the range of available relief depending on the nature and history of one’s undocumented status. Throughout the discussion, there is the recognition that governmental actors have latitude, sometimes enormously wide latitude, to interpret the laws. It is often in these interstices where abuse occurs. We next discuss the fugitive disentitlement doctrine, and the trend to apply the doctrine outside of its normal confines in the context of criminal defendants and to deprive the courts of jurisdiction to hear the appeals of immigrants. We point out the infirmities with applying the fugitive disentitlement doctrine in the context of immigration. In the Real ID Act, among other legislation, there are severe jurisdiction-stripping provisions which have deprived federal district courts, in habeas proceedings, of the power to review final orders of removal, and modified the jurisdiction of the federal courts of appeals to hear immigrants’ appeals in other important ways. We argue that in these provisions the Real ID Act violates the Suspension Clause. In our conclusion we argue that metaphors certainly help us to interpret the world by making connections between disparate concepts. However, metaphors are not merely “figures of speech” but can result in tools of powerful persuasion. The danger of equating terrorists with immigrants and vice versa through the metaphor of the war on terror has become a very real threat to immigrants’ rights, and by extension, to all our rights, citizens and non-citizens alike.
反恐战争作为移民管制的隐喻:一场扭曲辩论的批判观点
“反恐战争”是一个强有力的隐喻,深入到数百万非美国人的日常生活中。不管是国内还是国外的公民。这场“战争”扭曲了辩论,特别是在移民监管和改革方面。它尤其有害,因为它在无意识的层面上影响着我们对移民和移民人口的未明假设。在这篇文章中,作者首先讨论了所谓的“锚”婴儿,现在变成了一个新的,更可怕的概念,“恐怖”婴儿。这是讨论的一个很好的起点,因为它相当尖锐地说明了修辞是如何将辩论推向荒谬和夸张的地步的。然后,我们讨论与恐怖有关的不可接受和驱逐理由的扩散。诉讼中出现的问题主要围绕“物质支持”一词的可延展性,“恐怖活动”一词的范围过于宽泛,以及《移民和国籍法》(INA)第237条将不可受理理由纳入驱逐出境的平行理由所带来的困难。同样令人不安的是围绕“非法移民”一词的误解。我们主张采用一种更细致入微的方法,根据一个人无证身份的性质和历史,考虑到可用救济的范围。在整个讨论中,人们都认识到政府行为者有解释法律的自由,有时是非常广泛的自由。虐待往往发生在这些间隙。接下来,我们将讨论剥夺逃亡者权利原则,以及将该原则应用于刑事被告的正常范围之外的趋势,以及剥夺法院审理移民上诉的管辖权。我们指出在移民背景下应用逃亡剥夺权利原则的弱点。在《真实身份法》(Real ID Act)和其他立法中,有一些严格的剥夺管辖权的条款,剥夺了联邦地区法院在人身保护诉讼中审查最终驱逐令的权力,并修改了联邦上诉法院在其他重要方面审理移民上诉的管辖权。我们认为,在这些条款中,《真实身份法》违反了暂停条款。在我们的结论中,我们认为隐喻确实通过在不同的概念之间建立联系来帮助我们解释世界。然而,隐喻不仅仅是“修辞手段”,而且可以成为强有力的说服工具。通过反恐战争的比喻将恐怖分子与移民等同起来,反之亦然,这种危险已经成为对移民权利的非常现实的威胁,进而对我们所有人的权利,公民和非公民都构成了威胁。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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