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Open Letter on Immigrants and Crime
Updated August 17, 2007

Contents



July 2, 2007

Dear Mr. President, Members of Congress, and Governors:

Immigration has enriched the economy and culture of the United States since the founding of the nation. Yet immigrants long have been scapegoats for many social problems that afflict the nation. As a result, myths and stereotypes about immigrants, rather than established facts, far too often serve as the basis for public perceptions that drive misguided immigration policies.

One of the most pervasive misperceptions about immigrants is that they are more likely to commit predatory crimes than are the native-born. Popular movies, television series, and a sensationalizing news media propagate the enduring image of immigrant communities permeated by crime and violence. But this widespread belief is simply wrong.

Numerous studies by independent researchers and government commissions over the past 100 years repeatedly and consistently have found that, in fact, immigrants are less likely to commit crimes or to be behind bars than are the native-born. This is true for the nation as a whole, as well as for cities with large immigrant populations such as Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, and Miami, and cities along the U.S.-Mexico border such as San Diego and El Paso.

That immigration does not automatically lead to higher crime rates is evident in the fact that crime rates have fallen in the United States at the same time immigration has increased. Since the early 1990s, immigration to the United States -­ both legal and undocumented­has reached historic highs. Yet rates of violent crime and property crime have declined sharply over the same period, and the violent crime rate has reached historic lows. Moreover, among men age 18-39 (who comprise the vast majority of the prison population), the incarceration rate of the native-born is much higher than the incarceration rate of the foreign-born.

Immigrants in every ethnic group in the United States have lower rates of crime and imprisonment than do the native born. This is true for all immigrant groups ­- including the Mexicans, Salvadorans, and Guatemalans who comprise most of the undocumented immigrants in the country. Even though immigrants from these countries are far more likely than natives to have less than a high-school education and to live in poverty, they are far less likely to be behind bars or to commit crimes. Moreover, teenage immigrants are much less likely than native-born adolescents to engage in risk behaviors such as delinquency, violence, and substance abuse that often lead to imprisonment.

The problem of violent crime in the United States is not caused by immigrants, regardless of their legal status. To be sure, the large-scale undocumented immigration of the past 10 years has caused significant fiscal and administrative problems for state and local governments, and has placed unexpected burdens on overcrowded schools in areas where immigrants are concentrated. But it has not raised rates for violent crimes or crimes against property and immigrants should not be subject to selective laws and practices based on false claims to the contrary. Immigration is a national issue that requires uniform federal policies based on accurate assessments of U.S. economic and demographic needs.

There are real dangers inherent in the myth that immigrants are more prone to criminality than are the native-born. This inaccurate assumption has flourished in a post-9/11 climate of fear in which terrorism and undocumented immigration often are mentioned in the same breath. It was a key rationalization for provisions in the 2001 USA PATRIOT Act that authorized the arrest, imprisonment, and deportation of non-citizens without judicial review -­ practices that harken back to the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798.

Immigrants and natives alike deserve a reasoned public debate on immigration that addresses the many complexities of the issue. We, as sociologists, criminologists, legal scholars and other social scientists, both academics and practitioners in the criminal justice system, including prosecutors, police officers, and criminal attorneys, strongly urge state and national policymakers who are drafting laws that affect immigrants to base these laws on demonstrated facts rather than on false assumptions.

Signatories:

Richard D. Alba
The University at Albany, State University of New York
Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Public Policy

Sarah Babb
Boston College
Associate Professor of Sociology

Stanley R. Bailey
University of California, Irvine
Assistant Professor of Sociology

Susan Benesch
Georgetown University Law Center
Fellow, Center for Applied Legal Studies

Ann Benson
Immigration Project, Washington Defender Association
Directing Attorney

Irene Bloemraad
University of California, Berkeley
Assistant Professor of Sociology

Kitty Calavita
University of California, Irvine
Professor of Criminology, Law and Society

Patrick J. Carr
Rutgers University
Assistant Professor of Sociology

Miguel Ceballos
University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Assistant Professor of Sociology and Ethnic Studies

Jorge Chapa
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Professor of Sociology and Director, Center on Democracy in a Multiracial Society

Leo R. Chávez
University of California, Irvine
Professor of Anthropology

Linda Chavez
One Nation Indivisible
President

David Cook-Martín
Grinnell College
Assistant Professor of Sociology

G. David Curry
University of Missouri-St. Louis
Professor of Criminology & Criminal Justice

Cynthia García Coll
Brown University
Charles Pitt Robinson and John Palmer Barstow Professor of Education, Psychology and Pediatrics

Wayne A. Cornelius
University of California, San Diego
Theodore Gildred Distinguished Professor of Political Science and U.S.-Mexican Relations, and Director, Center for Comparative Immigration Studies

Mark E. Courtney
University of Chicago
McCormick Tribune Professor of Social Service Administration, and Past Director, Chapin Hall Center for Children

Pawan Dhingra
Oberlin College
Associate Professor of Sociology and Comparative American Studies

Cynthia Duarte
Quinnipiac University
Assistant Professor of Sociology

Finn Esbensen
University of Missouri-St. Louis
E. Desmond Lee Chair in Youth Crime and Violence, and Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice

Walter A. Ewing
Immigration Policy Center, American Immigration Law Foundation
Research Associate

Joe R. Feagin
Texas A&M University
Professor of Sociology and Past President, American Sociological Association

Lynne R. Feldman
University of Illinois College of Law
Adjunct Professor

Katherine Fennelly
University of Minnesota
Professor and Fesler-Lampert Chair in Urban and Regional Affairs

Nancy Foner
Hunter College and Graduate Center, City University of New York
Distinguished Professor of Sociology

Bill Form
Ohio State University
Professor Emeritus of Sociology

Reanne Frank
Ohio State University
Assistant Professor of Sociology

Brian Fry
Indiana Wesleyan University
Associate Professor of Sociology

Andrew J. Fuligni
University of California, Los Angeles
Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

Elizabeth Fussell
Tulane University
Assistant Professor of Sociology

Roberta Garner
DePaul University
Professor and Chair of Sociology

Tanya Golash-Boza
University of Kansas
Assistant Professor of Sociology and American Studies

William A. Gamson
Boston College
Past President, American Sociological Association

Herbert J Gans
Columbia University
Robert S. Lynd Professor of Sociology, and Past President, American Sociological Association

Paul S. Gray
Boston College
Associate Professor of Sociology

John Hagan
Northwestern University
John D. MacArthur Professor of Sociology and Law; Senior Research Fellow, American Bar Foundation, and Editor of Annual Review of Law & Social Science

Marilyn Halter
Boston University
Professor of History and Director, American & New England Studies Program Research Associate, Institute on Culture, Religion and World Affairs

Douglas Hartmann
University of Minnesota
Associate Professor of Sociology

Angela J. Hattery
Wake Forest University
Zachary T. Smith Reynolds Associate Professor of Sociology and Women & Gender Studies

Bruce D. Haynes
University of California, Davis
Associate Professor of Sociology

Bill Ong Hing
University of California, Davis
Professor of Law

Julie Horney
The University at Albany, State University of New York
Dean and Professor, School of Criminal Justice

Jennifer L. Hochschild
Harvard University
Henry LaBarre Jayne Professor of Government, Professor of African and African American Studies, and Harvard College Professor

Jennifer Holdaway, Ph.D.
Social Science Research Council
Program Officer, International Migration Program

Michael Hout
University of California, Berkeley
Professor of Sociology and Demography

C. Ronald Huff
University of California, Irvine
Dean, School of Social Ecology, and Professor of Criminology, Law and Society

Charles Jaret
Georgia State University
Professor of Sociology

Paul Jesilow
University of California, Irvine
Associate Professor of Criminology, Law and Society

Tomás R. Jiménez
University of California, San Diego
Assistant Professor of Sociology

Benjamin E. Johnson
American Immigration Law Foundation
Executive Director

Susanne Jonas
University of California, Santa Cruz
Professor of Latin American and Latino Studies

Arne L. Kalleberg
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Kenan Distinguished Professor of Sociology, and President-Elect, American Sociological Association

Daniel Kanstroom
Boston College Law School
Professor and Director of Human Rights Program

Philip Kasinitz
Hunter College and Graduate Center, City University of New York
Professor of Sociology, and Past President, Eastern Sociological Society

Robert Kaufman
Ohio State University
Professor of Sociology

Nazli Kibria
Boston University
Associate Professor of Sociology

Caitlin Killian
Drew University
Associate Professor of Sociology

Dae Young Kim
University of Maryland, College Park
Assistant Professor of Sociology and Asian American Studies

Peter Kivisto
Augustana College
Richard Swanson Professor of Social Thought and Chair of Sociology

Fred Kniss
Loyola University, Chicago
Professor and Chair of Sociology

Daniel M. Kowalski
Editor-in-Chief, Bender's Immigration Bulletin

Lauren J. Krivo
Ohio State University
Professor of Sociology

Gary LaFree
University of Maryland, College Park
Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice

Ralph W. Larkin
John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York
Senior Research Associate

Janet L. Lauritsen
University of Missouri-St. Louis
Professor of Criminology & Criminal Justice

Sylvia R. Lazos
University of Nevada, Las Vegas, William S. Boyd School of Law
Justice Myron Leavitt Professor of Law

Ivan Light
University of California, Los Angeles
Professor of Sociology

April Linton
University of California, San Diego
Assistant Professor of Sociology

Lyn H. Lofland
University of California, Davis
Professor of Sociology

Scott M. Lynch
Princeton University
Associate Professor of Sociology

Theo Majka
University of Dayton
Professor of Sociology

Ramiro Martínez, Jr.
Florida International University
Professor of Criminal Justice

Helen B. Marrow
Harvard University
Co-editor, The New Americans: A Guide to Immigration Since 1965

Douglas S. Massey
Princeton University
Henry G. Bryant Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs; President, American Academy of Political and Social Science, and Past President, American Sociological Association,

Monica McDermott
Stanford University
Assistant Professor of Sociology

Sara S. McLanahan
Princeton University
William S. Tod Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs

M. Isabel Medina
Loyola University, New Orleans, College of Law
Ferris Family Professor of Law

Cecilia Menjívar
Arizona State University
Associate Professor of Sociology

Vanessa Merton
Pace University School of Law
Professor of Law and Faculty Supervisor, Immigration Justice Clinic, John Jay Legal Services, Inc.

Jon'a Meyer
Rutgers University
Associate Professor of Criminology

Jody Miller
University of Missouri-St. Louis
Associate Professor of Sociology

Teresa A. Miller
The University at Buffalo School of Law, State University of New York
Professor of Law

Joya Misra
University of Massachusetts
Associate Professor of Sociology and Public Policy

John H. Mollenkopf
City University of New York, Graduate Center
Distinguished Professor of Political Science and Sociology and Director of the Center for Urban Research

Jeylan T. Mortimer
University of Minnesota
Professor of Sociology

Nancy A. Naples
University of Connecticut
Professor of Sociology and Women's Studies

Katherine S. Newman
Princeton University
Forbes '41 Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs

Dina G. Okamoto
University of California, Davis
Assistant Professor of Sociology

Michael A. Olivas
University of Houston Law Center
William B. Bates Distinguished Chair of Law, and Director, Institute of Higher Education Law and Governance

D. Wayne Osgood
The Pennsylvania State University
Professor, Crime, Law and Justice Program

Nancy K. Ota
Albany Law School
Professor of Law

Sarah Paoletti
University of Pennsylvania Law School
Clinical Supervisor and Lecturer, Transnational Legal Clinic

Karen F. Parker
University of Delaware
Associate Professor of Sociology and Criminal Justice

Mary Pattillo
Northwestern University
Professor and Chair of Sociology and African-American Studies

Susan Pearce, PhD
West Virginia University
Visiting Assistant Professor, Division of Sociology and Anthropology

David N. Pellow
University of California, San Diego
Professor of Ethnic Studies

Michael P. Predmore
Stanford University
Professor of Spanish

Robert D. Putnam
Harvard University
Malkin Professor of Public Policy, Kennedy School of Government

Mary Romero
Arizona State University
Professor of Sociology, Justice & Social Inquiry

Lory D. Rosenberg
Author, Immigration Law and Crimes
Former Appellate Immigration Judge, U.S. Board of Immigration Appeals; and Adjunct Professor, Washington College of Law

Rubén G. Rumbaut
University of California, Irvine
Professor of Sociology

Robert J. Sampson
Harvard University
Henry Ford II Professor and Chair of Sociology

Mariano Sana
Louisiana State University
Assistant Professor of Sociology

Alex M. Saragoza
University of California, Berkeley
Professor of Ethnic Studies

Leslie Salzinger
Boston College
Associate Professor of Sociology

Joachim J. Savelsberg
University of Minnesota
Professor of Sociology

Armin Schwegler
University of California, Irvine
Professor of Spanish Linguistics & Director of Global Cultures

Denise Segura
University of California, Santa Barbara
Professor of Sociology

Carroll Seron
University of California, Irvine
Professor of Criminology, Law & Society

Andy Silverman
University of Arizona, Rogers College of Law
Joseph M. Livermore Professor of Law and Director of Clinical Programs

David A. Smith
University of California, Irvine
Professor of Sociology and Co-Editor, Contemporary Sociology

Robert Smith
Baruch College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York
Associate Professor of Sociology, Immigration Studies and Public Affairs

Deborah Smith
University of Montana School of Law
Adjunct Professor

Laurel Smith-Doerr
Boston University
Assistant Professor of Sociology

Dan R. Smulian
Brooklyn Law School
Assistant Professor of Clinical Law

Janet P. Stamatel
The University at Albany, State University of New York
Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice

Norman H. Stamper, Ph.D.
Chief of Police, Seattle (Ret.), and Chief of Police, San Diego (Ret.)

Judith Stepan-Norris
University of California, Irvine
Professor of Sociology

Carola Suárez-Orozco
New York University
Chair and Professor of Applied Psychology; Co-Director of Immigration Studies, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education & Human Development, NYU

Terrance J. Taylor
University of Missouri-St. Louis
Associate Research Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice

Barrie Thorne
University of California, Berkeley
Professor of Sociology and Professor and Chair of Gender & Women's Studies

Marta Tienda
Princeton University
Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs, and Past President, Population Association of America

Donald Tomaskovic-Devy
University of Massachusetts
Professor and Chair of Sociology

Enid Trucios-Haynes
University of Louisville, Brandeis School of Law
Professor of Law

Ruth N. López Turley
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Assistant Professor of Sociology

Jeffery T. Ulmer
The Pennsylvania State University
Associate Professor of Sociology and Crime, Law, and Justice

Abel Valenzuela Jr.
University of California, Los Angeles
Associate Professor of Urban Planning

Edward Vargas
Indiana University-Bloomington
Associate Instructor of Public and Environmental Affairs

Alexander T. Vazsonyi
Auburn University
Professor of Human Development and Family Studies

Geoff Ward
Northeastern University
Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice

R. Stephen Warner
University of Illinois at Chicago
Professor of Sociology

Mary C. Waters
Harvard University
M.E. Zukerman Professor of Sociology

Deborah M. Weissman
University of North Carolina School of Law
Professor of Law and Director of Clinical Programs

Bruce Western
Princeton University
Professor of Sociology

Judith Wittner
Loyola University, Chicago
Professor of Sociology

Norman R. Yetman
The University of Kansas
Emeritus Professor of American Studies & Sociology

Min Zhou
University of California, Los Angeles
Professor of Sociology & Asian American Studies

Aristide R. Zolberg
New School for Social Research
Walter Eberstadt Professor of Political Science

Frank M. Afflitto, Ph.D.
Kentucky Wesleyan College
Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice

Alan Aja
Brooklyn College (CUNY)
Professor of Puerto Rican & Latino Studies

A. Aneesh
University of Wisconsin
Assistant Professor of Sociology and Global Studies

Judith Blau
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Professor

María Estela Brisk
Boston College
Professor, Lynch School of Education

Natasha Cabrera
University of Maryland
Professor

Charissa S. L. Cheah, Ph.D.
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Assistant Professor of Psychology

José A. Cobas, Ph.D.
Arizona State University
Professor of Sociology, School of Social and Family Dynamics

Julie A. Dowling, Ph.D.
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Assistant Professor of Latina/Latino Studies Program

Westy A. Egmont, PhD
Founder, Association of New Americans

Dina Francesca Haynes
New England School of Law
Professor

Matthew I. Hirsch
Widener University School of Law
Adjunct Professor of Immigration Law

Carol S. Huntsinger, Ph.D.
College of Lake County
Professor of Psychology and Education

Nikki Jones
University of California
Assistant Professor of Sociology

Christy Woodward Kaupert
San Antonio College
Assistant Professor of Political Science

Maria Kefalas
Saint Joseph's University, Associate Professor
Director, Institute for Violence Research and Prevention

Gabriel Kuperminc, Ph.D.
Georgia State University
Associate Professor of Psychology

Thao Le, Ph.D., MPH
Colorado State University
Assistant Professor of Human Development and Family Studies

Peggy Levitt
Wellesley College
Chair and Associate Professor of Sociology

Ana S.Q. Liberato, Ph.D.
University of Florida
Visiting Assistant Professor, Center for Women's Studies and Gender Research

Dr Patrick McGovern
Princeton University
Visiting Fellow, Department of Sociology

Janet S. Oh, Ph.D.
California State University Northridge
Assistant Professor of Psychology

Irma M. Olmedo
University of Illinois Chicago
Associate Professor

R.S. Oropesa
Department of Sociology
Professor of Sociology & Demography

Julia L. Perilla, Ph.D.
Georgia State University
Associate Professor of Psychology

Lesley Williams Reid
Georgia State University
Associate Professor of Sociology

Stephen T. Russell
University of Arizona
Professor of Family Studies & Human Development
Norton School of Family & Consumer Sciences

Traci Schlesinger, PhD
DePaul University
Assistant Professor

Lisa Patel Stevens, Ph.D.
Boston College
Assistant Professor





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